Purpose(s)
To evaluate results
of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) following debulking surgery in
patients with extensive metastatic disease and/or poor medical
performance
Method(s)
Advanced stage
epithelial ovarian cancer patients were treated with either NACT
followed by debulking surgery or primary surgery followed by adjuvant
chemotherapy after assessment of the extent of disease by laparoscopy or
laparotomy.
Results
Out of 297, 223
patients were in the primary surgery group, whereas 74 of them met NACT
criteria. Optimal cytoreduction rates were 63.2 % in primary surgery
group and 60.8 % in NACT group, respectively (p: 0.709). In the primary surgery group, the overall survival was significantly higher (p: 0.002). Mean patient age was more advanced (p: 0.014) and the performance status of patients was poorer (p < 0.001) in NACT group. Only patient group (primary surgery or neoadjuvant chemotherapy) (p: 0.001) retained significance as predictors of survival in multivariate analyses.
Conclusion(s)
Improved rate of
optimal cytoreduction with NACT in advanced ovarian cancer patients does
not prolong survival. The extent of disease at diagnosis is the primary
determinant of survival. Randomizing patients with equally extensive
disease and performance status to either NACT or primary debulking
surgery in a future study will better clarify benefits attributed to
NACT.
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