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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Primary chemotherapy-associated effect of second-line chemotherapy on survival of patients with advanced ovarian cancer.

BACKGROUND: The current treatment of patients with recurrent ovarian cancer who have received initial platinum- or taxane-based chemotherapy depends on the results of the initial chemotherapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how to make the selection of second-line agents for patients with recurrent ovarian carcinoma initially diagnosed as stage II to IV. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective crossover study in patients who received second-line chemotherapy at Jikei University School of Medicine. We evaluated the responses, progression-free survivals, survivals of second-line chemotherapy, and overall survivals after primary surgery for 51 patients. The treatment cohorts were defined as follows: TC1, patients who were given paclitaxel and carboplatin as first-line chemotherapy and who, upon recurrence, were treated with a platinum-based combination as second-line; and TC2, patients who were given a non-taxane-based platinum combination as first-line chemotherapy, followed, at the time of recurrence, with paclitaxel and carboplatin. RESULTS: The response rates of the second-line chemotherapy for the TC1 and TC2 groups were 44% and 25% (P=0.09). The median progression-free survivals of TC1 and TC2 were 12.9 and 6.4 months (P=0.018; hazard ratio [HR], 2.42; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.16-5.04). The median survivals after second-line chemotherapy for the two groups were 16.8 and 10.4 months (P=0.007; HR, 2.78; 95% CI, 1.33-5.84) and overall survivals after primary surgery were 36.6 and 27.9 months (P=0.007; HR, 2.36; 95% CI, 1.07-5.21). CONCLUSION: The TC1 group demonstrated a significantly better response and extension of progression-free survival, as well as significantly better survival after crossover and overall survival after primary surgery. As this was a retrospective analysis, this effect should be considered as hypothesis-generating and assessed prospectively in other trials comparing these two chemotherapy schedules.[1]

References

  1. Primary chemotherapy-associated effect of second-line chemotherapy on survival of patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Isonishi, S., Hirama, M., Saitou, M., Yasuda, M., Tanaka, T. Int. J. Clin. Oncol. (2006) [Pubmed]
 
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