BMC Cancer (Sep 2008)

Activity of chemotherapy in mucinous ovarian cancer with a recurrence free interval of more than 6 months: results from the SOCRATES retrospective study

  • Alletti Desiderio,
  • Breda Enrico,
  • Lauria Rossella,
  • Manzione Luigi,
  • Ghezzi Fabio,
  • Mereu Liliana,
  • Villa Antonella,
  • Katsaros Dionyssios,
  • Cormio Gennaro,
  • Odicino Franco,
  • Scollo Paolo,
  • Scarfone Giovanna,
  • Ferrandina Gabriella,
  • Pignata Sandro,
  • Ballardini Michela,
  • Lombardi Alessandra,
  • Sorio Roberto,
  • Mangili Giorgia,
  • Priolo Domenico,
  • Magni Giovanna,
  • Morabito Alessandro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-8-252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 252

Abstract

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Abstract Background Mucinous ovarian carcinoma have a poorer prognosis compared with other histological subtypes. The aim of this study was to evaluate, retrospectively, the activity of chemotherapy in patients with platinum sensitive recurrent mucinous ovarian cancer. Methods The SOCRATES study retrospectively assessed the pattern of care of a cohort of patients with recurrent platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer observed in the years 2000–2002 in 37 Italian centres. Data were collected between April and September 2005. Patients with recurrent ovarian cancer with > 6 months of platinum free interval were considered eligible. Results Twenty patients with mucinous histotype and 388 patients with other histotypes were analyzed. At baseline, mucinous tumours differed from the others for an higher number of patients with lower tumor grading (p = 0.0056) and less advanced FIGO stage (p = 0.025). At time of recurrence, a statistically significant difference was found in performance status (worse in mucinous, p = 0.024). About 20% of patients underwent secondary cytoreduction in both groups, but a lower number of patients were optimally debulked in the mucinous group (p = 0.03). Patients with mucinous cancer received more frequently single agent platinum than platinum based-combination therapy or other non-platinum schedules as second line therapy (p = 0.026), with a response rate lower than in non-mucinous group (36.4% vs 62.6%, respectively, p = 0.04). Median time to progression and overall survival were worse for mucinous ovarian cancer. Finally, mucinous cancer received a lower number of chemotherapy lines (p = 0.0023). Conclusion This analysis shows that platinum sensitive mucinous ovarian cancer has a poor response to chemotherapy. Studies dedicated to this histological subgroup are needed.