Ar. Munkarah et al., PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE OF RESIDUAL DISEASE IN PATIENTS WITH STAGE-IVEPITHELIAL OVARIAN-CANCER, Gynecologic oncology, 64(1), 1997, pp. 13-17
Purpose: To evaluate the role of surgical debulking in patients with s
tage TV ovarian cancer. Methods: We conducted a retrospective review o
f patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer treated at M.D. And
erson Cancer Center. Eligible patients included women with stage IV di
sease treated with platinum-based chemotherapy. Surgical debulking was
considered optimal if the diameter of the largest residual tumor was
2 cm or less. Survival analysis and comparisons were performed using t
he Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test. Results: One hundred eig
ht women with stage IV ovarian cancer were identified. The extraperito
neal metastatic sites were the liver parenchyma in 16 patients, the pl
eura in 54 patients, a variety of other organs in 22, and two or more
sites in the remaining 16. Median age of the patient population was 58
years (range 35-81 years). Surgery to reduce the primary tumor was pe
rformed in 100 patients. The procedures included salpingo-oophorectomy
with or without hysterectomy in 94 patients, omentectomy in 90, small
bowel resection in 4, large bowel resection in 23, and splenectomy in
2. At the completion of surgery, tumor reduction was considered optim
al in 31 patients, suboptimal in 61, and undetermined in 8. The overal
l median survival for optimally debulked patients was 25 months compar
ed to 15 months for suboptimally debulked patients (P < 0.02). The pro
gression-free survival, on the other hand, was not statistically diffe
rent between the two groups. Conclusion: Residual tumor seems to be an
important prognostic factor in patients with stage IV ovarian cancer.
Surgical debulking may play a significant role in the treatment of th
ese patients. (C) 1997 Academic Press