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Blog Archives: Nov 2004 - present
Special items: Ovarian Cancer and Us blog best viewed in Firefox
Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology (full access requires $$ subscription)
Approximately 20% of women with advanced-stage ovarian cancer survive
beyond 12 years after treatment and are effectively cured. Initial
therapy for ovarian cancer comprises surgery and chemotherapy, and is
given with the goal of eradicating as many cancer cells as possible.
Indeed, the three phases of therapy are as follows: debulking surgery to
remove as much of the cancer as possible, preferably to a state of no
visible residual disease; chemotherapy to eradicate any microscopic
disease that remains present after surgery; and second-line or
maintenance therapy, which is given to delay disease progression among
patients with tumour recurrence. If no cancer cells remain after initial
therapy is completed, a cure is expected. By contrast, if residual
cancer cells are present after initial treatment, then disease
recurrence is likely. Thus, the probability of cure is contingent on the
combination of surgery and chemotherapy effectively eliminating all
cancer cells. In this Perspectives article, I present the case that the
probability of achieving a cancer-free state is maximized through a
combination of maximal debulking surgery and intraperitoneal
chemotherapy. I discuss the evidence indicating that by taking this
approach, cures could be achieved in up to 50% of women with
advanced-stage ovarian cancer.
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