[HTML][HTML] Early initiation of chemotherapy following complete resection of advanced ovarian cancer associated with improved survival: NRG Oncology/Gynecologic …

KS Tewari, JJ Java, RN Eskander, BJ Monk… - Annals of …, 2016 - Elsevier
KS Tewari, JJ Java, RN Eskander, BJ Monk, RA Burger
Annals of Oncology, 2016Elsevier
Background To determine whether time from surgery to initiation of chemotherapy impacts
survival in advanced ovarian carcinoma. Patients and methods This is a post-trial ad hoc
analysis of Gynecologic Oncology Group protocol 218, a phase III randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial designed to study the antiangiogenesis agent, bevacizumab, in
primary and maintenance therapy for patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian
carcinoma. Maximum attempt at debulking was an eligibility criterion. Stage III patients, not …
Background
To determine whether time from surgery to initiation of chemotherapy impacts survival in advanced ovarian carcinoma.
Patients and methods
This is a post-trial ad hoc analysis of Gynecologic Oncology Group protocol 218, a phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial designed to study the antiangiogenesis agent, bevacizumab, in primary and maintenance therapy for patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian carcinoma. Maximum attempt at debulking was an eligibility criterion. Stage III patients, not stage IV, were required to have gross macroscopic or palpable residual disease following surgery. The survival impact of time from surgery to initiation of chemotherapy was studied using Cox regression models and stratified by treatment arm, residual disease and other clinical and pathologic factors.
Results
One thousand seven hundred eighteen assessable patients were randomized (stage III (n = 1237); stage IV (n = 477), including those with complete resection (stage IV only, n = 81), low-volume residual (≤1 cm, n = 701), and suboptimal (>1 cm, n = 932). On multivariate analysis, time to chemotherapy initiation was predictive of overall survival (P < 0.001), with the complete resection group (i.e. stage IV) encountering an increased risk of death when time to initiation of chemotherapy exceeded 25 days (95% confidence interval 16.6–49.9 days).
Conclusion
Survival for women with advanced ovarian cancer may be adversely affected when initiation of chemotherapy occurs >25 days following surgery. Our analysis applies to stage IV only as women with stage III who underwent complete resection were not eligible for this trial. These results, however, are consistent with Gompertzian first-order kinetics where patients with microscopic residual are most vulnerable.
Clinical Trials Identifier
NCT00262847.
Elsevier