Treatment of ovarian cancer with surgery, short-course chemotherapy and whole abdominal radiation

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_925E2FDAD8C8
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Treatment of ovarian cancer with surgery, short-course chemotherapy and whole abdominal radiation
Journal
Annals of Oncology
Author(s)
Buser  K., Bacchi  M., Goldhirsch  A., Greiner  R., Diener  P., Sessa  C., Jungi  W. F., Forni  M., Leyvraz  S., Engeler  V.
ISSN
0923-7534 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/1996
Volume
7
Number
1
Pages
65-70
Notes
Clinical Trial
Journal Article --- Old month value: Jan
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The primary aim was to induce a high number of pCR in early (FIGO IC, IIB + C) - and advanced (FIGO III-IV) - stage ovarian cancer with a surgery plus 4 cycles of cisplatin and melphalan (PAMP) regimen. The second objective was to prevent relapse with WAR in patients in remission after chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: 218 eligible patients were treated after staging laparotomy with cisplatin 80 mg/sqm i.v. on day 1 and melphalan 12 mg/sqm i.v. on day 2 q 4 weeks. Response was verified by second-look laparotomy. WAR was carried out with the open field technique on a linear accelerator (daily dose: 1.3 Gy, total dose: 29.9 Gy) in patients with pathological or clinical CR or pathological PR with microscopical residual disease. RESULTS: 146/218 patients (67%, 95% CI: 61%-73%) responded to PAMP: 56 (26%) achieved pCR, 24 (11%), cCR, 56 (26%) pPR and 10 (5%) cPR (c = clinical, p = pathological). Multivariate analyses revealed that in advanced stages (92 cases in remission), the achievement of pCR was the most important factor for longer time to failure (TTF) and survival. Only 51/118 (43%) patients in remission received WAR. Early-stage patients <= 55 years were more likely to have WAR than patients older than 55 years (77% vs. 23%; p = 0.02). Advanced-stage patients with cCR were less likely to be irradiated than patients with pCR or pPR (10% vs. 51%; p = 0.003). Toxicity of PAMP was acceptable with 10% of WHO grade 4 hematologic toxicity. Acute hematological toxicity of WAR caused interruption (33%) or incompleteness (33%) of irradiation in the majority of patients. CONCLUSIONS: PAMP is an effective treatment for advanced ovarian cancer with a 67% response rate after 4 cycles. For the majority of patients in remission, WAR as a consolidation treatment was hardly feasible. For these patients new treatment modalities to consolidate remission are needed.
Keywords
Adult Aged Aged, 80 and over Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects/*therapeutic use Cisplatin/administration & dosage Combined Modality Therapy Drug Administration Schedule Feasibility Studies Female Humans Melphalan/administration & dosage Middle Aged Neoplasm Staging Ovarian Neoplasms/radiotherapy/surgery/*therapy Radiotherapy/adverse effects Remission Induction
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
28/01/2008 9:32
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:55
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