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Peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer: chemosensitivity test and tissue markers as predictors of response to chemotherapy

Authors :
Massimo Framarini
Dino Amadori
Salvatore Virzì
Livia Turci
Anna Tesei
Wainer Zoli
Chiara Arienti
Antonio Grassi
Emanuela Scarpi
Giorgio Maria Verdecchia
Rosella Silvestrini
Source :
Journal of Translational Medicine, Vol 9, Iss 1, p 94 (2011), Journal of Translational Medicine
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
BMC, 2011.

Abstract

Background Platinum-based regimens are the treatments of choice in ovarian cancer, which remains the leading cause of death from gynecological malignancies in the Western world. The aim of the present study was to compare the advantages and limits of a conventional chemosensitivity test with those of new biomolecular markers in predicting response to platinum regimens in a series of patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer. Methods Fresh surgical biopsy specimens were obtained from 30 patients with primary or recurrent peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer. ERCC1, GSTP1, MGMT, XPD, and BRCA1 gene expression levels were determined by Real-Time RT-PCR. An in vitro chemosensitivity test was used to define a sensitivity or resistance profile to the drugs used to treat each patient. Results MGMT and XPD expression was directly and significantly related to resistance to platinum-containing treatment (p = 0.036 and p = 0.043, respectively). Significant predictivity in terms of sensitivity and resistance was observed for MGMT expression (75.0% and 72.5%, respectively; p = 0.03), while high predictivity of resistance (90.9%) but very low predictivity of sensitivity (37.5%) (p = 0.06) were observed for XPD. The best overall and significant predictivity was observed for chemosensitivity test results (85.7% sensitivity and 91.3% resistance; p = 0.0003). Conclusions The in vitro assay showed a consistency with results observed in vivo in 27 out of the 30 patients analyzed. Sensitivity and resistance profiles of different drugs used in vivo would therefore seem to be better defined by the in vitro chemosensitivity test than by expression levels of markers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14795876
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Translational Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0828f3041875cb90abf92d5eb21dd940