Literature DB >> 18253120

A phase II randomised clinical trial comparing cisplatin, paclitaxel and ifosfamide with cisplatin, paclitaxel and epirubicin in newly diagnosed advanced epithelial ovarian cancer: long-term survival analysis.

R Fruscio1, N Colombo, A A Lissoni, A Garbi, R Fossati, N Ieda', V Torri, C Mangioni.   

Abstract

To test the feasibility and efficacy of epirubicin and ifosfamide added to first-line chemotherapy with cisplatin and paclitaxel in a phase II randomised clinical trial. Patients with histologically proven epithelial ovarian cancer were randomly assigned to receive first-line polychemotherapy with cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin (CEP) or cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide (CIP) for six cycles every 21 days. Two hundred and eight patients were randomised between the two treatment arms and the median number of cycles per patient was six. Toxicity was predominantly haematological with both regimens; however, anaemia, leucopaenia, neutropaenic fever and use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factors and transfusion were significantly more frequent in the CIP treatment arm. Response rates were 85% (95% confidence interval (CI) 77-93%) in the CIP arm and 90% (95% CI 84-96%) in the CEP arm; complete response rates were 48 and 52%. After a median follow-up of 82 months, median overall survival (OS) was 51 and 65 months; 5-year survival rates were respectively 43 and 50%. In this clinical trial, both regimens showed good efficacy, but toxicity was heavier with the CIP regimen. Considering that more than 50% of patients were suboptimally debulked after the first surgery, OS seems to be longer than is commonly reported. This unexpected finding might be a consequence of the close surgical surveillance and aggressive chemotherapeutic approach.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18253120      PMCID: PMC2259172          DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604231

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Cancer        ISSN: 0007-0920            Impact factor:   7.640


Advanced epithelial ovarian cancer treatment is still a challenge for gynaecologic oncologists. Despite recent improvements in treatment, most ovarian cancer patients will relapse eventually, and only about one-third are alive after 5 years (Heintz ). Today, cytoreductive surgery followed by six cycles of carboplatin/paclitaxel is widely accepted as the standard therapy for advanced ovarian cancer (McGuire ; du Bois ; Neijt ; Piccart ). Attempts to improve long-term survival have involved the addition of a third non-cross-resistant drug with proven antitumour activity to first-line chemotherapy . We report here a large phase II clinical trial that started in 1997 with the primary objective of exploring the effects in terms of toxicity, response to therapy and survival of the addition of epirubicin and ifosfamide to the cisplatin/paclitaxel regimen. Cisplatin was chosen because it was the standard platinum compound used in ovarian cancer when the trial started. A few years later, cisplatin was replaced by carboplatin, because it was better tolerated with an improved quality of life. Indeed two large, independent phase III trials conducted by AGO and GOG reported similar efficacy for the two drugs (du Bois ; Ozols ). Until recently, epirubicin was considered an option mainly for the treatment of recurrent or platinum-resistant disease (Ray-Coquard ; Buda ), with similar antitumour activity but fewer side effects than doxorubicin (Maluf and Spriggs, 2002). Doxorubicin had a significant impact on the response rate and on the long-term overall survival (OS) when added to first-line chemotherapy with cisplatin (The Ovarian Cancer meta-analysis project, 1991; Fanning ; A’Hern and Gore, 1995). Epirubicin too has been tested in several phase I/II trials in combination with paclitaxel and carboplatin at doses of 60 or 75 mg m−2, with promising results, the main toxicity of the combination being myelosuppression (Hill ; Naumann ; du Bois ; Gregory ; Papadimitriou ; Fleming ; Kristensen ; Romanini ). However, two recent randomised clinical trials found that the addition of epirubicin to standard treatment did not improve OS or progression-free survival (PFS) (Kristensen ; du Bois ). The second drug we decided to study in this trial in addition to cisplatin and paclitaxel was ifosfamide. Ifosfamide has been studied in combination with other drugs such as etoposide, topotecan and vinorelbine for the treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer (Gonzalez-Martin ; Chiara ; Shaheen ). Shortly after the start of this clinical trial, in a phase I and a phase II trial of cisplatin and paclitaxel combined with ifosfamide, significant activity against ovarian epithelial cancer was noted. The regimen was feasible with ifosfamide doses up to 5 g m−2 (Kosmas ; Papadimitriou ).

PATIENTS AND METHODS

Patients

Women 18 years of age or older with histologically proven epithelial ovarian carcinoma were recruited and randomly assigned to the cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide (CIP) or cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin (CEP) treatment arm. Inclusion criteria were International Federation of Gynecologic Oncology stage II–IV, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0–2, no prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy, adequate haematologic, hepatic and renal function defined as absolute neutrophil count >1.5 × 109 cells per litre, platelet count at least 100 × 109 cells per litre, serum creatinine and total bilirubin not more than 1.25 times the upper normal limit. Exclusion criteria included mixed mesodermal tumours, borderline tumours, concurrent malignancies within the previous 5 years (excluding basal cell carcinoma), pregnancy, lactation, peripheral neuropathy of grade 2 or higher, congestive heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias. Patients were randomised within 4 weeks of surgery. The study had ethics committee approval from the two participating centres (San Gerardo Hospital, Monza, Italy and European Institute of Oncology, Milan, Italy), and all the patients gave written informed consent.

Treatment plan

Six cycles of chemotherapy were planned with 3-week intervals between them, the first cycle starting within 2 weeks of randomisation. In CEP, drug doses were epirubicin 80 mg m−2, paclitaxel 175 mg m−2 and cisplatin 75 mg m−2. Epirubicin was administered before paclitaxel (Venturini ). In CIP, paclitaxel and cisplatin doses were the same as for CEP; ifosfamide was given at 5 g m−2 with the chemoprotectant MESNA. Cycles were repeated if no progressive disease or prohibitive toxicity occurred. Treatment was delayed for up to 2 weeks if the neutrophil count was less than 1.5 × 109 per litre and the platelet count was less than 100 × 109 per litre on day 1 of each cycle. Dose reductions were allowed in any of the following circumstances: 1-week cycle delay for two cycles in succession or 2-week cycle delay because of prolonged bone marrow depression; febrile neutropaenia or thrombocytopaenic bleeding; any drug-related side effect requiring hospitalisation with i.v. antibiotics or platelet transfusion. Dose-reduction levels were epirubicin 60 mg m−2 (level 1) and 45 mg m−2 (level 2), ifosfamide 2.5 g m−2 (level 1) and 1.5 g m−2 (level 2), cisplatin 50 mg m−2 (level 2) and paclitaxel 135 mg m−2 (level 2). Patients with a partial response after the six cycles of chemotherapy could receive additional treatment cycles or a second chemotherapeutic regimen, at the investigator's discretion.

Clinical assessment

CA125 levels were measured before each cycle. Response was assessed with a CT scan after the third and the last cycles. The CA125 response was classified according to the method of Rustin . Clinical response was assessed using WHO criteria (Miller ). Adverse events and toxicity were graded using the National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria version 2.0 (National Cancer Institute). Second-look surgery was permitted. Follow-up for each patient consisted of a physical examination every 3 months for the first 3 years after chemotherapy, every 6 months in the next 2 years and one visit every year thereafter. CA125 was measured before each visit. Computed tomography was repeated yearly for 5 years, if there was any suspicion of relapse or progressive disease.

Statistical analysis

This was a phase II, multicentre, randomised clinical trial. Sample size was based on the assumption of a pathologic complete response (pCR) rate of 20% with standard treatment, and was planned to exclude a pCR <15% with a=0.05, and to recognise a pCR=30% with a power=0.85. According to these criteria, 51 evaluable patients per arm (60 randomised) should have been entered. Data of this phase II study have been published (Colombo ), leading to the following conclusions: (1) both regimens were feasible and (2) pCR rates were higher than those expected with other standard therapies. Therefore, based on these positive evidences, it was decided to continue the study to confirm positive response rates in a larger sample and to obtain long-term survival data and further confirmatory evidence to move a regimen into a phase III trial. Sample size was based on the assumption that the historic median survival is 36 months in patients receiving the reference platinum and paclitaxel doublet regimen (CP). Given this assumption and that a 33% improvement in 3-year survival (hazard ratio=0.66, which translates into increases from 50 to 63% in 3-year survival) was considered as sufficient evidence to move a regimen into a phase III trial, each treatment arm was planned to have about 100 patients (type-I error limited to 0.05 (one-tailed test); power 0.80). For this further analysis, primary end point was OS, defined as the time from randomisation to death from any cause. Secondary end points were PFS, defined as the time from randomisation to the earliest occurrence of progression or death from any cause and overall response rate. Other secondary outcome measures aimed to assess safety included frequency and severity of adverse events. Patients meeting all inclusion criteria were consecutively randomised by a central data centre. This study was noncomparative and was not powered to demonstrate differences between treatment arms. Although no formal statistical comparison of the two arms was planned, survival curves were estimated by the Kaplan–Meier method and compared using the log-rank test. Additional time-to-event analyses were done using the Cox proportional hazards model, adjusting for multiple baseline characteristics. Fisher's exact test was done on the response rates and toxicity levels. These tests were for exploratory purposes only, and all P-values are two-sided; statistical significance was set at 0.05 and analysis was done using SAS software version 9.0 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).

RESULTS

Population

Two hundred and eight patients were randomised between the two treatment arms (106 to CIP and 102 to CEP) in the two recruiting centres (San Gerardo Hospital, Monza and European Institute of Oncology, Milan). One patient allocated to the CEP arm was ineligible because of a diagnosis of pancreatic metastatic carcinoma. One patient allocated to the CIP arm died before receiving any chemotherapy. Three patients allocated to CIP and three to CEP received only platinum and paclitaxel. One patient allocated to the CIP arm refused the chemotherapy. Therefore 199 patients were eligible for safety and efficacy assessment (101 in the CIP arm and 98 in the CEP arm). The two treatment arms were well balanced with respect to baseline characteristics (Table 1).
Table 1

Patients' main characteristics

  CIP (n=101) CEP (n=98)
  % %
Age (years)
 Median5252
 Range2724
 7371
   
BSA (m2)
 Median1.61.6
 Range1.31.3
 2.42.0
PS
 08992
 198
 220
   
FIGO stage
 IIA02
 IIB31
 IIC11
 IIIA13
 IIIB64
 IIIC7674
 IV1315
   
Histology
 Serous6470
 Mucinous43
 Endometrioid1910
 Clear cells57
 Poorly differentiated810
   
Grade
 146
 22014
 37680
   
Residual tumour
 NED2015
 < 1 cm1424
 1–2 cm1411
 2–5 cm2318
 5–10 cm1119
 >10 cm1813
   
Type of surgery a
 13017
 24452
 31923
 478

Abbreviations: BSA=body surface area; CEP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin; CIP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide; FIGO=Federation of Gynecologic Oncology; NED=no evidence of disease; PS=performance status.

1=laparotomic histerectomy, bilateral annesiectomy, omentectomy, appendicectomy, pelvic linphoadenectomy; 2=laparotomic histerectomy, bilateral annesiectomy, omentectomy, appendicectomy; 3=laparotomic histerectomy, bilateral annesiectomy; 4=biopsies only.

Toxicity

A total of 1149 cycles of chemotherapy were administered (575 CIP, 574 CEP), and toxicity data were available for 85% of the cycles; maximum toxicity grades were available for all the patients. Treatment changes because of toxicity for each drug are shown in Table 2. In the CIP arm, 38% of patients received the planned dose of ifosfamide, 46% received a one-level reduction and 16% a two-level reduction. In the CEP arm, 51% of patients received the full dose of epirubicin, 46% received a one-level dose reduction and 3% a two-level dose reduction. One patient in the CEP arm had to discontinue epirubicin on account of a generalised maculo-papular rash, and in the CIP arm, ifosfamide was suspended after the third cycle for a worsening of chronic hepatitis.
Table 2

Treatment modifications and toxicity management in both arms

  CIP (n=101) CEP (n=98)  
Toxicity % % P
Number of cycles administered575574 
Number of patients delayed49370.08
Weeks of treatment delay, total116117 
Cisplatin reduction21220.81
Paclitaxel reduction27170.09
Epirubicin/ifosfamide reduction62490.07

Abbreviations: CEP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin; CIP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide.

Haematological toxicity is summarised in Table 3. Nonhaematological toxicity is shown in Table 4.
Table 3

Grade 3–4 haematological toxicity and management in both arms

  CIP (n=101) CEP (n=98)  
Toxicity % % P
Anaemia48270.002
Leukopaenia95760.0001
Neutropaenia97950.51
Thrombocytopaenia37250.08
Febrile neutropaenia, grade 31430.007
G-CSF48220.0002
Transfusion37220.03
Hospitalisation34190.02

Abbreviations: CEP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin; CIP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide; G-CSF=granulocyte colony-stimulating factors.

Table 4

Nonhaematological toxicity in both treatment arms

  CIP (n=101)
CEP (n=98)
  Grade 1–2 Grade 3–4 Grade 1–2 Grade 3–4
Toxicity % % % %
Allergy13280
Cardiac1100
Vascular0120
Artromyalgia375395
Nausea78217624
Vomiting73248017
Mucositis433532
Fevera382190
Infection162152
Neurotoxicity593690
Alopaecia098098

Abbreviations: CEP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin; CIP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide.

Statistically significant difference between the two treatment regimens (P<0.01).

Allergic reactions were all to paclitaxel and occurred in 23 patients in all; 21 consisted only of short-lasting flushing without fever (grade 1), while one patient in the CIP arm experienced a grade 3 (oedema) and one a grade 4 (anaphylaxis) allergic reaction. Both these patients were able to receive the remaining cycles of chemotherapy after the adverse event, with a change in premedication. There were two cases of cardiovascular toxicity (one had tachycardia and one a cardiac ischaemia that did not require intervention) in the CIP arm only. The two patients in the CEP arm who had grade 2 vascular toxicity had superficial phlebitis, while the only patient with grade 4 toxicity had pulmonary thromboembolism.

Response rates

Clinical and pathological responses to treatment are summarised in Table 5. Of the 191 patients with stage III–IV disease who received at least two cycles of chemotherapy, 172 were assessable for response. Response was not evaluable in 19 patients (11 in the CIP arm and 8 in the CEP arm) because they had no evidence of disease after the first surgery and no positive CA125 levels at the start of chemotherapy. Of the 123 patients with suboptimal debulking (residual tumour (RT) >1 cm) after first surgery, 95 underwent second-look laparoscopy after the planned course of chemotherapy. Thirty-three of the 68 patients with microscopic or no residual disease after the first surgery underwent the same procedure; thus pathological response could be evaluated on 128/191 patients (67%). Responses of the remaining 44 patients (28 with measurable disease and 16 with positive CA125 only) were evaluated on the basis of clinical, radiological and biochemical data.
Table 5

Response to treatment for patients with stage III–IV disease

  CIP (n=97) CEP (n=94)
Response No. (%) No. (%)
Complete response41 (48)45 (52)
 Clinical12 (14)14 (16)
 Pathological29 (34)31 (36)
Partial response32 (37)33 (38)
 Clinical4 (5)8 (9)
 Pathological28 (33)25 (29)
Stable disease10 (12)7 (8)
 Clinical3 (3)1 (1)
 Pathological7 (8)6 (7)
Progressive disease3 (3)1 (1)
 Clinical2 (2)0
 Pathological1 (1)1 (1)
Inevaluablea118

Abbreviations: CEP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin; CIP=cisplatin/paclitaxel/ifosfamide.

Response was not evaluable in patients without evidence of disease after the first surgery and negative CA125.

Overall, 38 patients had a clinical complete/partial response, while 113 had a pathological complete/partial response. Response rates were 85% (95% CI 77–93%) in the CIP arm and 90% (95% CI 84–96%) in the CEP arm; complete response rates were 48 and 52%.

Survival analysis

Overall survival was analysed excluding the eight patients with stage II ovarian cancer. No patient was lost to follow-up. Therefore, survival data were available for a total of 191 patients (97 in the CIP arm and 94 in the CEP arm). Median follow-up was 82 months. Median OS was 51 months in the CIP arm and 65 months in the CEP arm (Figure 1A and B). Median OS was 54 months for all patients, and 57 months including the eight patients with stage II disease. Median OS was only 43 months for patients who had been suboptimally debulked. Patients with RT >5 cm after first surgery had OS 31 months (33 in the CEP arm and 30 months in the CIP arm). Median PFS was 25 months in the CIP arm and 23 months in the CEP arm (Figure 2A and B). Overall survival at the third and the fifth year of the patients on CIP was 59% (95% confidence interval (CI) 48–69%) and 43% (95% CI 33–53%), and for patients on CEP was 68% (95% CI 58–77%) and 50% (95% CI 40–60%), respectively. Although both regimens were active, only CEP regimen would formally merit further study as the third year OS for this regimen was significantly better than historical rate (i.e. the lower CI of third year OS was higher than 50%).
Figure 1

(A) Overall survival for the CEP regimen. (B) Overall survival for the CIP regimen.

Figure 2

(A) Progression-free survival for the CEP regimen. (B) Progression-free survival for the CIP regimen

DISCUSSION

One of the secondary objectives of this study was to compare the toxicity of the two experimental regimens and assess their feasibility, because one of the main risks of adding a third drug to standard chemotherapy is a predictable increase in adverse events. Overall, both the combinations used in this phase II clinical trial showed good feasibility and acceptable tolerability and toxicity, especially CEP, using the two drugs under investigation at relatively high doses. As expected from published toxicity data, the CIP arm was more toxic than the CEP arm. More than 60% of patients who received CIP did not tolerate the starting dose of 5 g m−2 ifosfamide and required at least one dose-level reduction. However, even in the CEP arm, almost half the patients could not complete the six courses of chemotherapy with the planned doses of the three drugs. In our opinion, the main limitation to CIP polychemotherapy at the doses presented in this trial is that its toxicity seems less manageable than with CEP, as indicated by the higher frequency of leucopaenia (P=0.0001), anaemia (P=0.002), need for granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) (P=0.0002) and transfusion (P=0.03) and, above all, the higher incidence of febrile neutropaenia, considered as a potentially life-threatening event. The subsequent need for hospitalisation, besides worsening patients’ quality of life, raises the costs of therapy. Toxicity in the CIP arm was greater than reported elsewhere; however, the phase I dose-escalating study (Papadimitriou ) used prophylactic G-CSF and had febrile neutropaenia in one patient out of eight treated at doses comparable with ours, and the phase II trial (Kosmas ) reported less frequent high-grade haematological toxicity but used only 1.5 g m−2 ifosfamide, which is 70% lower than the dose we used. Overall, the results of this study indicate low feasibility of the CIP regimen with a starting dose of 5 g m−2 ifosfamide, at least without prophylactic G-CSF. On the other hand, most patients recovered from the toxicity induced by CEP with a dose reduction and a week's delay of therapy. The heavier toxicity of CIP would only be justified by greater efficacy than CEP or the standard chemotherapy. However, the two regimens showed similar results in terms of response rates. As expected, response rates obtained in this trial are similar to those reported elsewhere. Although no formal comparison of the two regimens was done in terms of OS, only the CEP regimen showed a significant improvement over historical therapy in the 3-year survival rate, which was the formal target outcome for our experimental design. However, it was the long-term survival in both study arms, which was noteworthy on account of the absence of patients lost to follow-up and the unusually long median follow-up (82 months), that merits comment. Median OS for all patients with stage III–IV epithelial ovarian cancer treated in the two arms was 54 months, and 62 months in the CEP arm. This is particularly interesting because 65% of patients in our study had an RT after first surgery >1 cm. Median OS for patients with an RT <1 cm has not yet been reached in either group, while it was 44 months for patients with an RT >1 cm. Even if this study had no control arm with the standard carboplatinpaclitaxel chemotherapy, making it impossible to compare the OS obtained with our experimental regimens, we did try to compare the results with some of the major randomised clinical trials published in the last 20 years (Table 6).
Table 6

Historical OS and PFS for patients with advanced ovarian cancer

First author Journal Patients Drugs PFSa OSa
Conte PFJ Clin Oncol (1986) 4: 965–969125CDDP+CTX12.622.7
   CDDP+CTX+Doxo13.326.7
Alberts DSJ Clin Oncol (1992) 10: 706–710342CDDP+CTXN/A17.4
   CBDCA+CTXN/A20
Swenerton KJ Clin Oncol (1992) 10: 718–721447CDDP+CTX13.123.3
   CBDCA+CTX13.525.7
Rothenberg MLJ Clin Oncol (1992) 10: 727–73450CDDP+CTX+RTN/A23.4
McGuire WPN Engl J Med (1996) 334: 1–6235CDDP+CTX1324
   CDDP+PTX1836
Alberts DSN Engl J Med (1996 Dec 26) 335(26): 1950–1955.546CDDP+CTX23.849
   CDDP+CTX18.341
ICONLancet (1998) 352: 1571–1576.1526CBDCA15.533
   CPPD+CTX+Doxo1733
Muggia FMJ Clin Oncol (2000 Jan) 18(1): 106–115.648CDDP16.430.2
   PTX10.825.9
   CDDP+PTX14.126.3
Markman MJ Clin Oncol (2001 Feb 15) 19(4): 1001–1007462CDDP+PTX2252
   CBDCA+PTX+CDDP2863
ICONLancet (2002 Aug 17) 360(9332): 505–5152074CBDCA+PTX17.336.1
   CPPD+CTX+Doxo16.135.4
Du Bois AJ Natl Cancer Inst (2003 Sep 3) 95(17): 1320–1329.798CBDCA+PTX17.243.3
   CDDP+PTX19.144.1
Ozols RFJ Clin Oncol (2003 Sep 1) 21(17): 3194–3200792CBDCA+PTX20.757.4
   CDDP+PTX19.448.7
Vasey PAJ Natl Cancer Inst (2004 Nov 17) 96(22): 1682–16911077CBDCA+PTX14.8N/A
   CBDCA+DTX15N/A
Pfisterer JJ Natl Cancer Inst (2006 Aug 2) 98(15): 1036–1045.1308CBDCA+PTX18.543.1
   CBDCA+PTX+TPT18.244.5
du Bois AJ Clin Oncol (2006 Mar 1) 24(7): 1127–1135.1282CBDCA+PTX17.941
   CBDCA+PTX+Epi18.445.8
Bookman MAJ Clin Oncol (2006) ASCO Annual Meeting Proceedings Part I. Vol 24, No. 18S (June 20 Supplement), 2006: 50024312CBDCA+PTX16.140
   CBDCA+PTX+Gem16.440.4
   CBDCA+PTX+Doxo16.442.8
   CBDCA+PTX+TPT15.339.1
   CBDCA+PTX+Gem15.440.2
Armstrong DKN Engl J Med (2006 Jan 5) 354(1): 34–43415CDDP+PTX23.865.6
   CDDP+PTX18.349.7

Abbreviations: CBDCA=carboplatin; CDDP=cisplatin; CTX=cyclophosphamide; Doxo=doxorubicin; DTX=docetaxel; Epi=epirubicin; Gem=gemcitabine; OS=overall survival; PFS=progression-free survival; PTX=paclitaxel; RT=radiotherapy; TPT=topotecan.

PFS and OS are expressed in months.

Since the introduction of platinum compounds in first-line chemotherapy, PFS has not improved much over the years, but OS has risen from about 20 months in the 1980s (Conte ; Alberts ; Rothenberg ; Swenerton ; Alberts ) to 30 months in the 1990s (McGuire ; ICON Collaborators, 1998; Muggia ) and 40 months in the last few years (Markman ; ICON Collaborators, 2002; Du Bois ; Armstrong ). In our series, PFS was slightly better than is commonly reported and considering the composition of our population, OS of 54 months is remarkable. Comparable results are reported only in trials that enrolled only patients with minimal or no residual disease after the first surgery (Alberts ; Markman ; ICON Collaborators, 2002; Armstrong ), and in other studies that considered the subgroup of patients with this positive prognostic factor (du Bois ; Pfisterer ). Interestingly, a recently published study on the role of aggressive cytoreductive surgery in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer reports a 5-year survival rate of 46% for patients who underwent radical surgery, similar to the present result (Eisenkop ; Aletti ). However, some recently published randomised clinical trial (Bookman ; du Bois ; Pfisterer ) failed to demonstrate an advantage for the triplets in the treatment of ovarian cancer patients compared to the standard doublet, showing an increased toxicity associated with the experimental treatment arms. Therefore, considering that our populations had no favourable clinical or biological prognostic factors, one of the reasons for better oncological outcome in our study might be the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures that followed first-line chemotherapy. Second-look laparoscopy was done in 67% of patients, and patients with persistent disease received a second chemotherapy course. After second-line chemotherapy laparoscopy was repeated, and the treatment was continued until pathological evidence of complete response. Of the 120 patients alive after 3 years, only 23% had not received any further chemotherapy after the first-line, whereas 42% received three or more different regimens; this proportion reaches 53% among patients with suboptimal debulking. This last observation suggests that the long PFS and OS of our patients might have been attributed to the chronicity of the postsurgical therapies, despite the fact that consolidation therapy of ovarian cancer has not been proven to increase survival. In addition, the impact of chronic chemotherapies on the quality of life of patients with ovarian cancer needs to be performed in future studies. Another factor that might have influenced our results is the cumulative dose of cisplatin. Following the trial protocol, we tried to give all patients the full platinum dose, reducing the two experimental drugs epirubicin and ifosfamide by one-dose levels in case of toxicity without recovery before reducing cisplatin and paclitaxel. In conclusion, both CIP and CEP showed good efficacy during long-term follow-up, but toxicity was greater than indicated by historical data with the standard carboplatin/paclitaxel chemotherapy. This observation adds to the evidence that adding a third drug to the standard chemotherapy does increase the toxicity but gives no clear advantage in efficacy. By integrating information such as OS and toxicity, the combination of cisplatin, paclitaxel and epirubicin we used should be chosen over CIP regime. Cisplatin/paclitaxel/epirubicin arm gave a very high 5-year survival rate, but in the absence of a comparison with current standard treatment, it cannot be recommended as first-line chemotherapy for advanced ovarian cancer.
  43 in total

1.  Ifosfamide, paclitaxel and cisplatin first-line chemotherapy in advanced, suboptimally debulked epithelial ovarian cancer.

Authors:  C A Papadimitriou; C Kouroussis; L A Moulopoulos; G Vlahos; A Rodolakis; C Kiamouris; E Diakomanolis; D Gika; S Michalas; M A Dimopoulos
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2001-10-01       Impact factor: 6.860

2.  Phase II study of paclitaxel, ifosfamide, and cisplatin as second-line treatment in relapsed small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  C Kosmas; N B Tsavaris; N A Malamos; M Vadiaka; C Koufos
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2001-01-01       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Phase III trial of standard-dose intravenous cisplatin plus paclitaxel versus moderately high-dose carboplatin followed by intravenous paclitaxel and intraperitoneal cisplatin in small-volume stage III ovarian carcinoma: an intergroup study of the Gynecologic Oncology Group, Southwestern Oncology Group, and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group.

Authors:  M Markman; B N Bundy; D S Alberts; J M Fowler; D L Clark-Pearson; L F Carson; S Wadler; J Sickel
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2001-02-15       Impact factor: 44.544

4.  Phase I trial of escalating doses of paclitaxel combined with fixed doses of cisplatin and doxorubicin in advanced endometrial cancer and other gynecologic malignancies: a Gynecologic Oncology Group study.

Authors:  G F Fleming; J M Fowler; S E Waggoner; L J Copeland; B E Greer; I Horowitz; G Sutton; R J Schilder; P M Fracasso; H G Ball; W P McGuire
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2001-02-15       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Sequence effect of epirubicin and paclitaxel treatment on pharmacokinetics and toxicity.

Authors:  M Venturini; G Lunardi; L Del Mastro; M O Vannozzi; G Tolino; G Numico; M Viale; I Pastrone; C Angiolini; G Bertelli; M Straneo; R Rosso; M Esposito
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 6.  Anthracyclines in the treatment of gynecologic malignancies.

Authors:  F C Maluf; D Spriggs
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 5.482

7.  Exploratory phase III study of paclitaxel and cisplatin versus paclitaxel and carboplatin in advanced ovarian cancer.

Authors:  J P Neijt; S A Engelholm; M K Tuxen; P G Sorensen; M Hansen; C Sessa; C A de Swart; F R Hirsch; B Lund; H C van Houwelingen
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2000-09       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  Ifosfamide and vinorelbine in advanced platinum-resistant ovarian cancer: excessive toxicity with a potentially active regimen.

Authors:  Antonio González-Martín; Carmen Crespo; José Luis García-López; Manuela Pedraza; Pilar Garrido; Enrique Lastra; Alfredo Moyano
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 5.482

9.  Epirubicin and paclitaxel (EPI-TAX regimen) for advanced ovarian cancer after failure of platinum-containing regimens.

Authors:  Isabelle Ray-Coquard; Thomas Bachelot; Jean-Paul Guastalla; Eric Levy; Jean-Dominique Tigaud; Pascal Vincent; Dominique Dramais; David Assouline; Eric Pujade-Lauraine
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 5.482

10.  Paclitaxel plus carboplatin versus standard chemotherapy with either single-agent carboplatin or cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and cisplatin in women with ovarian cancer: the ICON3 randomised trial.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2002-08-17       Impact factor: 79.321

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  2 in total

1.  ATP-based chemotherapy response assay in primary or recurrent ovarian and peritoneal cancer.

Authors:  Maria Lee; Sang Wun Kim; Eun Ji Nam; Hanbyoul Cho; Jae Hoon Kim; Young Tae Kim; Sunghoon Kim
Journal:  Yonsei Med J       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 2.759

2.  Assessment of Progression-Free Survival as a Surrogate End Point of Overall Survival in First-Line Treatment of Ovarian Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

Authors:  Xavier Paoletti; Liz-Anne Lewsley; Gennaro Daniele; Adrian Cook; Nozomu Yanaihara; Anna Tinker; Gunnar Kristensen; Petronella B Ottevanger; Gerasimos Aravantinos; Austin Miller; Ingrid A Boere; Robert Fruscio; Anna K L Reyners; Eric Pujade-Lauraine; Andrea Harkin; Sandro Pignata; Tatsuo Kagimura; Stephen Welch; James Paul; Eleni Karamouza; Rosalind M Glasspool
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-01-03
  2 in total

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