OVARIAN CANCER and US: delayed ovarian cancer care

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Showing posts with label delayed ovarian cancer care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label delayed ovarian cancer care. Show all posts

Saturday, April 07, 2012

abstract - Gynecologic Oncology - Outcome of immediate re-operation or interval debulking after chemotherapy at a gynecologic oncology center after initially incomplete cytoreduction of advanced ovarian cancer



Gynecologic Oncology - Outcome of immediate re-operation or interval debulking after chemotherapy at a gynecologic oncology center after initially incomplete cytoreduction of advanced ovarian cancer


Background

Prognosis in advanced ovarian cancer is largely determined by completeness of tumor resection achieved during primary surgery. Incomplete initial debulking occurs frequently in non-specialized centers and there is an ongoing discussion about the best time for re-surgery after referral to tertiary centers.

Methods

Patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (FIGO IIIB-IV) admitted between 1999 and 2007 who had primary incomplete surgery including those with initiated chemotherapy at outside institution were included. Surgical results, morbidity and prognosis were evaluated in patients with immediate re-operation before chemotherapy and those with interval debulking.

Results

48 eligible patients were identified in our tumor registry. Self-referral by patient was the most frequent mode of admission (n = 21, 43.8%). 22 patients (45.8%) patients underwent immediate re-surgery and 26 patients (54.2%) had an interval debulking after chemotherapy. In 12 patients (54.5%), macroscopically complete tumor removal could be achieved by immediate re-operation and in 17 patients (65.4%) after chemotherapy. Major complications were observed more frequently in patients with interval debulking (26.9 vs. 9.1%, p = 0.324). Median overall survival time was 53 and 34 months (p = 0.110) after immediate and delayed re-operation, respectively.

Conclusions

Upfront re-operation before start of chemotherapy is feasible and successful in an expertise referral centre in more than half of patients with incomplete primary surgery elsewhere. Complete resection even after initial incomplete debulking could improve outcome. Therefore, referral to expertise centers in those patients should be considered. Progression-free survival and overall survival showed a non-significant trend and complication rate a remarkable advantage in favor of upfront re-operation.

Keywords

  • primary ovarian cancer;
  • cytoreductive surgery;
  • interval debulking surgery