Cancers (Sep 2021)

A New Paradigm in Managing Advanced Ovarian Cancer: Differentiating Patients Requiring Neoadjuvant Treatment from Primary Cytoreduction

  • Francois Kraus,
  • Houssein El Hajj,
  • Marie-Cécile Le Deley,
  • Othman Aissaoui,
  • Bertrand Gachon,
  • Annick Chevalier,
  • Cyril Abdeddaim,
  • Anne-Sophie Lemaire,
  • Mariem Ben Haj Amor,
  • Dienabou Sylla,
  • Eric Leblanc,
  • Fabrice Narducci,
  • Delphine Hudry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194925
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 19
p. 4925

Abstract

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Our study aims to evaluate the comparability of primary debulking surgery (PDS) and neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) patients. This single-center retrospective study includes all patients treated for advanced stages high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas (HGSOC) between 2007 and 2017. Preoperative characteristics and postoperative outcomes were compared after a propensity score matching analysis. Of the 221 patients included, 38% underwent PDS, and 62% received NACT. There was no age difference at diagnosis; however, CA125 levels, PCI score levels, and rates of stage IV were higher in the NACT group. There were no differences concerning the rate and the severity of complications (p = 0.29). The propensity score distribution showed a broad distinction between PDS patients and NACT patients with no significant overlap. Survival analyses demonstrate, after a median follow-up of 66.5 months, an overall survival (OS) of 105.9 and progression-free survival (PFS) of 29.2 months in the PDS group, compared to OS of 52.8 and PFS of 18.9 months in the NACT group. Advanced HGSOC is a heterogeneous population, in which inoperable patients should be differentiated from PDS patients based on many factors, primarily tumor burden.

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