abstract
BACKGROUND:
The
international standard of care for women with suspected advanced
ovarian cancer is surgical debulking followed by platinum-based
chemotherapy. We aimed to establish whether use of platinum-based
primary chemotherapy followed by delayed surgery was an effective and
safe alternative treatment regimen.
METHODS:
In
this phase 3, non-inferiority, randomised, controlled trial (CHORUS)
undertaken in
87 hospitals in the UK and New Zealand, we enrolled women
with suspected
stage III or IV ovarian cancer. We randomly assigned
women (1:1) either to undergo primary surgery followed by six cycles of
chemotherapy, or to three cycles of primary chemotherapy, then surgery,
followed by three more cycles of completion chemotherapy. Each 3-week
cycle consisted of carboplatin AUC5 or AUC6 plus paclitaxel 175 mg/m
2,
or an alternative carboplatin combination regimen, or carboplatin
monotherapy. We did the random assignment by use of a minimisation
method with a random element, and stratified participants according to
the randomising centre, largest radiological tumour size, clinical
stage, and prespecified chemotherapy regimen. Patients and investigators
were not masked to group assignment. The primary outcome measure was
overall survival. Primary analyses were done in the intention-to-treat
population. To establish non-inferiority, the upper bound of a one-sided
90% CI for the hazard ratio (HR) had to be less than 1·18. This trial
is registered, number ISRCTN74802813, and is closed to new participants.
FINDINGS:
Between
March 1, 2004, and Aug 30, 2010, we randomly assigned 552 women to
treatment. Of the 550 women who were eligible, 276 were assigned to
primary surgery and 274 to primary chemotherapy. All were included in
the intention-to-treat analysis; 251 assigned to primary surgery and 253
to primary chemotherapy were included in the per-protocol analysis. As
of May 31, 2014, 451 deaths had occurred: 231 in the primary-surgery
group versus 220 in the primary-chemotherapy group. Median overall
survival was 22·6 months in the primary-surgery group versus 24·1 months
in primary chemotherapy. The HR for death was 0·87 in favour of primary
chemotherapy, with the upper bound of the one-sided 90% CI 0·98 (95% CI
0·72-1·05). Grade 3 or 4 postoperative adverse events and deaths within
28 days after surgery were more common in the primary-surgery group
than in the primary-chemotherapy group (60 [24%] of 252 women vs 30
[14%] of 209, p=0·0007, and 14 women [6%] vs 1 woman [<1%], p=0·001).
The most common grade 3 or 4 postoperative adverse event was
haemorrhage in both groups (8 women [3%] in the primary-surgery group vs
14 [6%] in the primary-chemotherapy group). 110 (49%) of 225 women
receiving primary surgery and 102 (40%) of 253 receiving primary
chemotherapy had a grade 3 or 4 chemotherapy related toxic effect
(p=0·0654), mostly uncomplicated neutropenia (20% and 16%,
respectively). One fatal toxic effect, neutropenic sepsis, occurred in
the primary-chemotherapy group.
INTERPRETATION:
In
women with stage III or IV ovarian cancer, survival with primary
chemotherapy is
non-inferior to primary surgery. In this study
population, giving primary chemotherapy before surgery is an acceptable
standard of care for women with advanced ovarian cancer.
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