Abstract
Ovarian
cancer has a different prognosis between early (I and II) and advanced
stage (III and IV). The mechanism of disease progression is unknown, but
patients with advanced disease may have a higher propensity for
seeding
of the
abdominal cavity early in the disease process than those with
early stage.
Theoretically if this is so, then patients with advanced
stage should have smaller sized tumors than patients with early stage.
Methods
This
was a retrospective chart review of patients in the tumor registry in
2003–2006. Patients had epithelial ovarian cancer, other cell types were
excluded. Only cases with documentation of surgical and pathologic
staging and measured dimensions on pathologic specimen were included.
Patient stage and all available
dimensions measured on diseased ovaries
were recorded. The dimensions for each patient were
averaged into a
single dimension for that patient, and then these measurements were
totaled and averaged.
Results
There were 110 patients analyzed: 85 with advanced disease, 25 with early stage.
The average measurement was 4.8
cm in advanced disease, and was 10.7
cm in early stage disease. This difference was statistically significant (
p
<

0.001).
Conclusions
Overall,
patients with early stage ovarian cancer have diseased ovaries that are
more than twice as large as those found in advanced disease. This
finding supports the fact that early versus advanced ovarian cancer are 2
separate disease processes. Early stage grows locally and does not
disseminate, and advanced stage disseminates while the tumor is still
relatively small. Theoretically there may be a factor that separates
these 2 into different diseases, where advanced disease patients have a
substance produced by their tumor that allows for early dissemination,
and early stage lacks this substance and only grows locally. Basic
science research comparing the tissue microarrays of early versus
advanced stage disease may be able to identify this difference. If the
difference is found, perhaps therapy can be targeted against this
difference, and screening tests for advanced ovarian cancer can be
improved.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.