| Literature DB >> 25254047 |
John Hoff1, Lauren Baldwin1, Jason Lefringhouse1, Edward Pavlik1, Rachel Miller1, Christopher DeSimone1, Frederick Ueland1, Thomas Tucker2, Richard Kryscio3, J R van Nagell1.
Abstract
Objective. The aim of this study was to document the survival advantage of lowering stage at detection from Stage IIIC to Stage IIIA epithelial ovarian cancer. Methods. Treatment outcomes and survival were evaluated in patients with Stage IIIA and Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer treated from 2000 to 2009 at the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center (UKMCC) and SEER institutions. Results. Cytoreduction to no visible disease (P < 0.0001) and complete response to platinum-based chemotherapy (P < 0.025) occurred more frequently in Stage IIIA than in Stage IIIC cases. Time to progression was shorter in patients with Stage IIIC ovarian cancer (17 ± 1 months) than in those with Stage II1A disease (36 ± 8 months). Five-year overall survival (OS) improved from 41% in Stage IIIC patients to 60% in Stage IIIA patients treated at UKMCC and from 37% to 56% in patients treated at SEER institutions for a survival advantage of 19% in both data sets. 53% of Stage IIIA and 14% of Stage IIIC patients had NED at last followup. Conclusions. Decreasing stage at detection from Stage IIIC to stage IIIA epithelial ovarian cancer is associated with a 5-year survival advantage of nearly 20% in patients treated by surgical tumor cytoreduction and platinum-based chemotherapy.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25254047 PMCID: PMC4165880 DOI: 10.1155/2014/312193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Definitions of Stage IIIA and Stage IIIC ovarian cancer∗.
| Stage III | |
| Tumor involves one or both ovaries with cytologically or histologically confirmed spread to the peritoneum outside the pelvis and/or metastasis to the retroperitoneal lymph nodes. | |
| Stage IIIA | |
| Microscopic metastasis beyond the pelvis. | |
| Stage IIIC | |
| Macroscopic, extrapelvic, peritoneal metastasis >2 cm in the greatest dimension and/or regional lymph node metastasis. |
*From Edge et al. [6].
Demographic data Stage IIIA versus Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer, University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center 2000–2009.
| IIIA | IIIC | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | ||
|
| |||
| Age at diagnosis | 58.6 ± 15.9 | 58.2 ± 12.4 |
|
| Number of live births at diagnosis | 1.9 ± 2.1 | 2.1 ± 1.6 |
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| Race | |||
| Black | 0 | 1 (0.5%) | |
| White | 15 (100%) | 185 (99.5%) |
|
| Other | 0 | 0 | |
| Appalachian Region | |||
| Appalachia | 8 (53%) | 115 (62%) |
|
| Non-Appalachia | 7 (47%) | 71 (38%) | |
| Urban region | |||
| Rural | 5 (33%) | 70 (38%) |
|
| Urban | 10 (67%) | 116 (62%) | |
| Cell type | |||
| Serous carcinoma | 8 (54%) | 118 (63%) | |
| Endometrioid carcinoma | 3 (20%) | 17 (10%) |
|
| Mixed adenocarcinoma (NOS) | 2 (13%) | 36 (19%) | |
| Clear cell, mucinous, carcinoma (NOS) | 2 (13%) | 15 (8%) | |
NOS: not otherwise specified.
Demographic data Stage IIIA versus Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer, US SEER 18 Registries 2000–2009.
| Stage | IIIA | IIIC | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number | 794 | 11,967 | |
| Age at diagnosis (mean) | 63.2 ± 14.4 | 62.2 ± 14.8 |
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| Race | |||
| Black | 49 (6.2%) | 712 (5.9%) |
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| White | 680 (85.6%) | 10,456 (87.4%) | |
| Other | 65 (8.2%) | 799 (6.7%) | |
| Appalachian Region | |||
| Appalachia | 30 (3.8%) | 539 (4.5%) |
|
| Non-Appalachia | 764 (96.2%) | 11,428 (95.5%) | |
| Urban region | |||
| Rural | 78 (9.8%) | 1,199 (10.0%) |
|
| Urban | 716 (90.2%) | 10,768 (90.0%) | |
| Cell type | |||
| Serous carcinoma | 396 (50.0%) | 7,952 (66.4%) |
|
| Endometrioid carcinoma | 90 (11.3%) | 740 (6.2%) | |
| Mixed adenocarcinoma (NOS) | 32 (4.0%) | 437 (3.7%) | |
| Mucinous carcinoma | 91 (11.5%) | 1,282 (10.7%) | |
| Carcinoma (NOS), other | 185 (23.2%) | 1,556 (13.0%) | |
NOS: not otherwise specified.
Treatment outcomes Stage IIIA versus Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer, University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center 2000–2009.
| IIIA | IIIC | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ||
| Complete debulking (no visible residual disease) | 15 (100%) | 64 (34.4%) |
|
| Complete response to chemotherapy | 15 (100%) | 138 (74.2%) |
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| Time to progression | |||
| Median (months) | 29 | 13 | |
| Mean (months)∗ | 36 ± 8 | 17 ± 1.3 |
|
| Range (months) | 15–75 | 2–123 | |
| Site of recurrence | |||
| Intraperitoneal | 7 (46.7%) | 137 (73.7%) | |
| Intra- + extraperitoneal | 0 | 8 (4.3%) | |
| Extraperitoneal | 0 | 14 (7.5%) | |
| NED∗∗ | 8 (53.3%) | 27 (14.5%) |
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| Overall survival | |||
| 2 years | 93.3% | 72.0% |
|
| 5 years | 60.0% | 41.8% |
*Mean ± standard error of mean.
**NED: no evidence of disease.
Figure 1(a) Overall survival of Stage IIIA versus Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer patients at the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center (2000–2009). (b) Overall survival of Stage IIIA versus Stage IIIC epithelial ovarian cancer patients in SEER∗18 Registries (2000–2009).