Abstract

Thirty patients with recurrent epithelial ovarian carcinoma who underwent secondary tumor-reductive surgery at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center were studied retrospectively. All had been initially treated by primary reductive surgery and postoperative chemotherapy and had a period of clinical remission of at least 6 months thereafter. Ninety percent of patients had grade 2 or 3 tumors. In 17 (57%), residual tumor volume was reduced to less than 2 cm. There were no postoperative deaths, but 40% of patients suffered postoperative morbidity, mostly prolonged ileus. Median survival after second surgery was 16.3–18 months for patients with residual tumor volume less than 2 cm and 13.3 months for those with residual volume greater than 2 cm (nonsignificant). When the second surgery followed the first by less than 18 months, survival was a median of 13.5 months after the second operation as compared with 19 months when the interval was 18 months or longer (nonsignificant). Twenty-two patients received postsurgical chemotherapy; only 11% of those who were evaluable responded. Although secondary tumor-reductive surgery for recurrent ovarian cancer is technically feasible, in the absence of an efficacious second-line medical therapy, its value is limited.

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