Are Early Relapses in Advanced-Stage Ovarian Cancer Doomed to a Poor Prognosis?

Archive ouverte

Vidal, Fabien | Guerby, Paul | Luyckx, Mathieu | Haddad, Pascale | Stoeckle, Eberhard | Morice, Philippe | Leblanc, Eric | Lecuru, Fabrice | Daraï, Emile | Classe, Jean Marc | Pomel, Christophe | Filleron, Thomas | Ferron, Gwenael | Querleu, Denis | Rafii, Arash

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

International audience. Objective: Early recurrence (ER) after completion of therapeutic regimen in advanced-stage ovarian cancer is a challenging clinical situation. Patients are perceived as invariably having a poor prognosis. We investigated the possibility of defining different prognostic subgroups and the parameters implicated in prognosis of ER patients.Study design: We analyzed a multi-centric database of 527 FIGO stage IIIC and IV ovarian cancer patients. We defined patients relapsing within 12 months as ER and investigated using Cox logistic regression the prognostic factors in ER group. We subsequently divided ER patients into good and poor prognosis groups according to a lower or higher overall survival (OS) at 12 months after relapse and determined parameters associated to poor prognosis.Results: The median follow up was 49 months. One hundred and thirty eight patients recurred within 12 months. OS and Disease Free Survival (DFS) were 24.6 and 8.6 months, respectively, in this group of patients. Among the ER patients, 73 had a poor prognosis with an OS after relapse below 12 months (mean OS = 5.2 months) and 65 survived after one year (mean OS = 26.9 months). Residual disease (RD) after debulking surgery and mucinous histological subtype negatively impacted prognosis (HR = 1.758, p = 0.017 and HR = 8.641, p = 0.001 respectively). The relative risk of death within 12 months following relapse in ER patients was 1.61 according to RD status. However, RD did not affect DFS (HR = 0.889, p = 0.5).Conclusion: ER in advanced-stage ovarian cancer does not inevitably portend a short-term poor prognosis. RD status after initial cytoreduction strongly modulates OS, that gives additional support to the concept of maximum surgical effort even in patients who will experience early recurrence. The heterogeneity in outcomes within the ER group suggests a role for tumor biology in addition to classical clinical parameters.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Which Surgical Attitude to Choose in the Context of Non-Resectability of Ovarian Carcinomatosis: Beyond Gross Residual Disease Considerations

Archive ouverte | Vidal, Fabien | CCSD

International audience. Background: In ovarian cancer, the increased rate of radical surgery comprising upper abdominal procedures has participated to improve overall survival (OS) in advanced stages by increasing t...

PARa-aOrtic LymphAdenectomy in locally advanced cervical cancer (PAROLA trial): a GINECO, ENGOT, and GCIG study

Archive ouverte | Martinez, Alejandra | CCSD

International audience

Impact of preoperative brachytherapy followed by radical hysterectomy in stage IB2 (FIGO 2018) cervical cancer: An analysis of SENTICOL I-II trials

Archive ouverte | Kissel, Manon | CCSD

International audience. Introduction: The goal of this study was to compare the outcomes of preoperative brachytherapy followed by radical surgery versus radical surgery alone in cervical cancer with tumor between 2...

Chargement des enrichissements...