Abstract

BackgroundOvarian cancer (OC) is considered the most lethal gynecological cancer, of which more than 65% cases are diagnosed in advanced stages, requiring platinum-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT).MethodsA prospective-longitudinal study was conducted among women with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AEOC), III and IV stages, and treated with NACT, at the National Cancer Institute – Mexico, from July 2017 to July 2018. Serum samples were obtained for quantification of CA125 and HE4 using ELISA at the first and in each of the three NACT cycles. The therapeutic response was evaluated through standard tomography. We determined whether CA125 and HE4, alone or in combination, were associated with TR to NACT during follow up.Results53 patients aged 38 to 79 years were included, 92.4% presented papillary serous subtype OC. Higher serum HE4 levels were observed in patients with non-tomographic response (6.89 vs 5.19 pmol/mL; p = 0.031), specially during the second (p = 0.039) and third cycle of NACT (p = 0.031). Multivariate-adjusted models showed an association between HE4 levels and TR, from the second treatment cycle (p = 0.042) to the third cycle (p = 0.033). Changes from baseline HE4 levels during the first cycle was negative associated with TR. No associations were found between CA125 and TR.ConclusionsSerum HE4 levels were independently associated with TR among patients with AOEC treated with NACT, also a reduction between baseline HE4 and first chemotherapy levels was also independently associated with the TR. These findings might be relevant for predicting a lack of response to treatment.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer (OC) is the second most common gynecological neoplasm, behind endometrial cancer, and is the most lethal gynecological cancer, being the eighth leading cause of cancer death in women [1]

  • Current treatment for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AOEC) involves primary debulking surgery followed by a adjuvant chemotherapy regimen based on the combination of Alegría‐Baños et al J Ovarian Res (2021) 14:96 platinum and taxane, or the initial administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) followed by surgery [2]

  • NACT is a treatment regimen that can be considered in selected patients [5,6,7], it does not negatively affect survival compared to primary debulking surgery plus postoperative chemotherapy and has even shown a significant reduction in perioperative complications and mortality [8, 9]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer (OC) is the second most common gynecological neoplasm, behind endometrial cancer, and is the most lethal gynecological cancer, being the eighth leading cause of cancer death in women [1]. Current treatment for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AOEC) involves primary debulking surgery followed by a adjuvant chemotherapy regimen based on the combination of Alegría‐Baños et al J Ovarian Res (2021) 14:96 platinum and taxane, or the initial administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) followed by surgery [2]. NACT is a treatment regimen that can be considered in selected patients [5,6,7], it does not negatively affect survival compared to primary debulking surgery plus postoperative chemotherapy and has even shown a significant reduction in perioperative complications and mortality [8, 9]. Ovarian cancer (OC) is considered the most lethal gynecological cancer, of which more than 65% cases are diagnosed in advanced stages, requiring platinum-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call