1. The potential therapeutic role of lymph node resection in epithelial ovarian cancer: a study of 13918 patients.
- Author
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Chan, JK, Urban, R, Hu, JM, Shin, JY, Husain, A, Teng, NN, Berek, JS, Osann, K, and Kapp, DS
- Subjects
Lymph Nodes ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Glandular and Epithelial ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Staging ,Lymph Node Excision ,Multivariate Analysis ,Survival Analysis ,Retrospective Studies ,Follow-Up Studies ,Time Factors ,Female ,lymph node resection ,ovarian cancer ,survival ,Neoplasms ,Glandular and Epithelial ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The aim of the study is to determine the role of lymphadenectomy in advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. The data were obtained from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program reported between 1988 and 2001. Kaplan-Meier estimates and Cox proportional hazards regression models were used for analysis. Of 13 918 women with stage III-IV epithelial ovarian cancer (median age: 64 years), 87.9% were Caucasian, 5.6% African Americans, and 4.4% Asians. A total of 4260 (30.6%) underwent lymph node dissections with a median number of six nodes reported. For all patients, a more extensive lymph node dissection (0, 1, 2-5, 6-10, 11-20, and >20 nodes) was associated with an improved 5-year disease-specific survival of 26.1, 35.2, 42.6, 48.4, 47.5, and 47.8%, respectively (P20 nodes) was associated with improved survivals of 36.9, 45.0, 47.8, 48.7, and 51.1%, respectively (P=0.023). On multivariate analysis, the extent of lymph node dissection and number of positive nodes were significant independent prognosticators after adjusting for age, year at diagnosis, stage, and grade of disease. The extent of lymphadenectomy is associated with an improved disease-specific survival of women with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer.
- Published
- 2007