abstract
June 17, 2016
Comparison of treatment invasiveness between upfront debulking
surgery versus interval debulking surgery following neoadjuvant
chemotherapy for stage III/IV ovarian, tubal, and peritoneal cancers in a
phase III randomised trial: Japan Clinical Oncology Group Study
JCOG0602.
BACKGROUND:
We
conducted a phase III, non-inferiority trial comparing upfront primary
debulking surgery (PDS) and interval debulking surgery (IDS) following
neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) for stage III/IV ovarian, tubal, and
peritoneal cancers (JCOG0602). Two earlier studies, EORTC55971 and
CHORUS, demonstrated non-inferior survival of patients treated with NAC.
However, they could not evaluate true treatment invasiveness because of
adding diagnostic laparotomy or laparoscopy before treatment in over
30% of both arms of EORTC55971 and in 16% of NAC arm of CHORUS.
METHODS:
Patients
were randomised into the standard arm (PDS followed by eight cycles of
paclitaxel and carboplatin [TC]) and NAC arm (four cycles of TC, IDS,
and four cycles of TC). In the standard arm, IDS was optional for
patients who had undergone suboptimal or incomplete PDS. Treatment
invasiveness was compared between arms (UMIN000000523).
RESULTS:
Between
November 2006 and October 2011, 301 patients were randomised. In the
standard arm, 147/149 underwent PDS and 49 underwent IDS. In the NAC
arm, 130/152 underwent IDS. The NAC arm required fewer surgeries (mean
0.86 versus 1.32, p < 0.001) and shorter total operation time (median
273 min versus 341 min, p < 0.001) than the standard arm and
required a lower frequency of abdominal organ resection (23.7% versus
37.6%, p = 0.012) or distant metastases resection (3.9% versus 10.7%,
p = 0.027). In the NAC arm IDS, blood/ascites loss was smaller (median
787 ml versus 3235 ml, p < 0.001) and albumin transfusion and G3/4
adverse events after surgery in total were less frequent (26.2% versus
58.5%, p < 0.001; 4.6% versus 15.0%, p = 0.005, respectively).
CONCLUSION:
Our
findings demonstrated that NAC treatment is less invasive than standard
treatment. NAC treatment may become the new standard treatment for
advanced ovarian cancer when non-inferior survival is confirmed in the
planned primary analysis in 2017.
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