Abstract

Although complete debulking surgery for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is more often achieved with interval debulking surgery (IDS) following neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), randomized evidence shows no long-term survival benefit compared to complete primary debulking surgery (PDS). We performed an observational cohort study of patients treated with debulking surgery for advanced EOC to evaluate the prognostic value of residual disease after debulking surgery. All patients treated between 1998 and 2010 in three Dutch referral gynaecological oncology centres were included. The prognostic value of residual disease after surgery for disease specific survival was assessed using Cox-regression analyses. In total, 462 patients underwent NACT-IDS and 227 PDS. Macroscopic residual disease after debulking surgery was an independent prognostic factor for survival in both treatment modalities. Yet, residual tumour less than one centimetre at IDS was associated with a survival benefit of five months compared to leaving residual tumour more than one centimetre, whereas this benefit was not seen after PDS. Leaving residual tumour at IDS is a poor prognostic sign as it is after PDS. The specific prognostic value of residual tumour seems to depend on the clinical setting, as minimal instead of gross residual tumour is associated with improved survival after IDS, but not after PDS.

Highlights

  • Advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the leading cause of gynaecologic cancer death

  • In this study we evaluated the prognostic significance of residual disease after primary debulking surgery and after interval debulking surgery

  • To our knowledge this is the largest cohort analysing prognostic factors in patients treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT)-interval debulking surgery (IDS) for EOC outside the realm of a clinical trial

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Summary

Introduction

Advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the leading cause of gynaecologic cancer death It is treated with a combination of cytoreductive surgery and chemotherapy. As the result of surgery is a very important and modifiable prognostic factor, no macroscopic residual disease should be pursued to obtain the best prognosis [3, 7,8,9,10]. This is more often achieved at IDS, it does not result in appreciably better overall survival. The prognostic value of tumour residual at debulking surgery appears different in patients who received NACT compared to PDS [3, 11, 12]

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