Secondary cytoreductive surgery at second-look laparotomy in advanced ovarian cancer: a Gynecologic Oncology Group Study
- PMID: 9264559
- DOI: 10.1006/gyno.1997.4806
Secondary cytoreductive surgery at second-look laparotomy in advanced ovarian cancer: a Gynecologic Oncology Group Study
Abstract
Reports which analyzed the effects of secondary cytoreductive surgery at second-look laparotomy have often included small numbers of patients who have been treated with a variety of first-line chemotherapy regimens and those who may have progressed on first-line therapy. The purpose of this study was to analyze survival following secondary cytoreductive surgery at second-look laparotomy in patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Review of the surgical data of 153 patients allowed classification of tumor size found at second-look laparotomy and tumor size remaining after cytoreduction. Multivariate analysis evaluated multiple risk factors for survival. Of 153 patients, 124 had macroscopic tumor at second-look laparotomy and 29 had microscopic disease only. Fifteen of 69 (22%) patients were found to have tumor > 1 cm in diameter and were cytoreduced to microscopic residual and 18/69 (26%) were left with 1 cm tumor. Twenty-one of 55 (38%) patients with < or = 1 cm tumor were debulked to microscopic residual. The shortest survival relative to patients found to have microscopic disease at second-look laparotomy was observed among patients whose maximum tumor size remained > 1 cm following second-look laparotomy (relative risk = 3.1, P = 0.0004). No difference in survival was seen between patients found to have microscopic disease and those cytoreduced to microscopic disease (P = 0.24). The risk of death was lower among patients debulked to a lower category (< or = 1 cm debulked to microscopic, relative risk = 0.48, P = 0.02; > 1 cm reduced to < or = 1 cm, relative risk = 0.49, P = 0.02; > 1 cm reduced to microscopic, relative risk = 0.44, P = 0.01). Whether this apparent beneficial effect of cytoreductive surgery at second-look laparotomy reflects the biology of the tumor which allows surgical cytoreduction or the effects of cytoreduction can only be addressed in a randomized prospective trial.
Comment in
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Secondary cytoreductive surgery: who benefits from it?Gynecol Oncol. 1997 Aug;66(2):169-70. doi: 10.1006/gyno.1997.4818. Gynecol Oncol. 1997. PMID: 9264558 No abstract available.
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