| Literature DB >> 7833134 |
F A Zoetmulder1, T J Helmerhorst, F van Coevorden, P E Wolfs, J P Leyer, A A Hart.
Abstract
In a retrospective study, 58 patients with bowel obstruction due to advanced ovarian cancer were analysed. In a forward stepwise proportional hazard regression analysis, we looked for factors influencing bowel obstruction-free survival. Patients who presented with bowel obstruction as the first sign of ovarian cancer and those with a longer interval between last cancer treatment and bowel obstruction did better. Patients with ascites did worse. No other independent factors were found. Based on these data, we classified patients into a favourable prognosis group (no previous treatment or interval since last treatment exceeding 6 months; no ascites) and a poor prognosis group (interval since last treatment shorter than 6 months; ascites). Patients from the favourable prognosis group had a median bowel obstruction-free survival of 8 months, compared to 1 month for the poor prognosis group (P < 0.001). Surgery had a marginally significant positive effect on bowel obstruction-free survival when compared to medical treatment in the favourable prognosis group (P = 0.052). Surgery had no effect at all in the poor prognosis patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7833134 DOI: 10.1016/0959-8049(94)e0131-m
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer ISSN: 0959-8049 Impact factor: 9.162