Abstract

Thirty-one evaluable patients with stages III and IV invasive ovarian adenocarcinoma were treated on a phase II protocol of second-line intraperitoneal cisplatin, cytarabine, and bleomycin. All 31 patients received first-line intravenous (IV) cisplatin-based chemotherapy; the size of the residual cancer was documented surgically before intraperitoneal chemotherapy in all patients. Response to intraperitoneal chemotherapy was documented by a third-look laparotomy in all patients not evidencing progression of disease clinically. There were eight responses (26%): five surgical complete responses and three surgical partial responses. Responders were patients with stage III ovarian cancer, small residual disease of less than or equal to 1 cm (primarily less than or equal to 5 mm), and patients who previously had responded to cisplatin-based IV chemotherapy. Of the 15 patients with stage III ovarian cancer, residual disease less than or equal to 1 cm, and those who had responded to first-line IV cisplatin-based chemotherapy, 53% (eight) responded to second-line intraperitoneal chemotherapy. Intraperitoneal chemotherapy as used in this phase II protocol would appear to be an effective second-line treatment in advanced ovarian cancer in this specific subset of patients.

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