Literature DB >> 19485991

Defining the surgical management of suspected early-stage ovarian cancer by estimating patient numbers through alternative management strategies.

J Warwick1, E Vardaki, N Fattizzi, I McNeish, A Jeyarajah, D Oram, L Hassan, A Covens, S Duffy, K Reynolds.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To establish the optimal management strategy for women with suspected stage 1 ovarian cancer.
DESIGN: We created a flowchart to illustrate each of six hypothetical management strategies. These considered two surgical approaches (systematic lymphadenectomy versus no lymph node dissection at all) in combination with three different policies for giving adjuvant chemotherapy.
SETTING: Gynaecological cancer centre, London, UK. DATA SOURCES: Patient data and published papers.
METHODS: We developed a deterministic model that uses information from multiple sources to estimate patient flow through each level of a hypothesised decision tree.
RESULTS: We estimated that for every 100 cases of suspected early-stage ovarian cancer, there would be 37 cases with 'apparent' stage 1 disease and that of these, two (6%) would be denied potentially life-saving adjuvant treatment if systematic lymphadenectomy was not performed. The number of women given chemotherapy would not, according to our estimates, differ greatly between the two surgical approaches, the 7% increase with systematic lymphadenectomy being because of cases identified as having nodal metastases.
CONCLUSIONS: We present a model of the intraoperative decision-making process that determines the extent of the staging procedure to be performed within our department when early-stage ovarian cancer is suspected. Unless adjuvant chemotherapy is prescribed for all, systematic pelvic and para-aortic node dissection is required to optimise survival. However, in our department, this would result in 32% of women with suspected early-stage ovarian cancer undergoing systematic node dissection. This flexible focused model may facilitate multidisciplinary team discussion when this part of the surgical staging procedure is considered within the context of the population presenting to the team, the morbidity of the procedure within the department and the predictive values of frozen section within that department. As the model is not disease-specific, it may be useful for decision making in other medical disciplines.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19485991     DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2009.02213.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BJOG        ISSN: 1470-0328            Impact factor:   6.531


  3 in total

1.  Phase I clinical trials in 85 patients with gynecologic cancer: the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center experience.

Authors:  John Moroney; Jennifer Wheler; David Hong; Aung Naing; Gerald Falchook; Diane Bodurka; Robert Coleman; Karen Lu; Lianchun Xiao; Razelle Kurzrock
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2010-03-26       Impact factor: 5.482

2.  Treatment when prognostic factors do not match St. Gallen recommendations: profiling of prognostic factors among HR(+) and HER2(-) breast cancer patients.

Authors:  Kyoko Satoh; Maki Tanaka; Ayako Yano; Jiang Ying; Tatsuyuki Kakuma
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 3.352

Review 3.  Intraoperative frozen section analysis for the diagnosis of early stage ovarian cancer in suspicious pelvic masses.

Authors:  Nithya D G Ratnavelu; Andrew P Brown; Susan Mallett; Rob J P M Scholten; Amit Patel; Christina Founta; Khadra Galaal; Paul Cross; Raj Naik
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2016-03-01
  3 in total

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