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Pathologic distribution at the time of interval tumor reductive surgery informs personalized surgery for high-grade ovarian cancer

Authors :
Anil K. Sood
Ahmed Enbaya
Tarrik M. Zaid
Bryan Fellman
Nicole D. Fleming
Marilyn Huang
Nyla Balakrishnan
Alaina J. Brown
Courtney D Bailey
Shannon N. Westin
Russell Broaddus
Pamela T. Soliman
Rebecca A. Previs
Alpa M. Nick
Diane C. Bodurka
Source :
Int J Gynecol Cancer
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

IntroductionThe surgical approach for interval debulking surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been extrapolated from primary tumor reductive surgery for high-grade ovarian cancer. The study objective was to compare pathologic distribution of malignancy at interval debulking surgery versus primary tumor reductive surgery.MethodsPatients with a diagnosis of high-grade serous or mixed, non-mucinous, epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer who underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy or primary tumor reductive surgery and had at least 6 months of follow-up were identified through tumor registry at a single institution from January 1995 to April 2016. Pathologic involvement of organs was categorized as macroscopic, microscopic, or no tumor. Statistical analyses included Mann-Whitney and Fisher’s exact tests.ResultsOf 918 patients identified, 366 (39.9%) patients underwent interval debulking surgery and 552 (60.1%) patients underwent primary tumor reductive surgery. Median age was 62.3 years (range 25.3–92.5). The majority of patients in the interval debulking surgery group were unstaged (261, 71.5%). In the patients who had a primary tumor reductive surgery, 406 (74.6%) had stage III disease. In both groups, the majority of patients had serous histology: 325 (90%) and 435 (78.8%) in the interval debulking and primary tumor reductive surgery groups, respectively. There was a statistically significant difference between disease distribution on the uterus between the groups; 31.4% of the patients undergoing interval debulking surgery had no evidence of uterine disease compared with 22.1% of primary tumor reductive surgery specimens (pConclusionIn patients undergoing interval debulking surgery, there was less macroscopic involvement of tumor in the uterus, adnexa and bowel compared with patients undergoing primary cytoreductive surgery.

Details

ISSN :
15251438
Volume :
31
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of gynecological cancer : official journal of the International Gynecological Cancer Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7994c6ddbb70b02eac1c6d1b8151c495