Fifty-one patients with ovarian cancer were tients with < 2 cm residual disease had sigentered in a randomised trial comparing treat-nificantly higher rate of complete remission rnent with cisplatin + adriamycin + cyclo-than those with > 2 crn residual disease. Carphosphamide (PAC) to cisplatin + 4'
Treatment of advanced ovarian cancer with cisplatin, adriamycin, and cyclophosphamide: Effect of treatment and incidence of intracranial metastases
โ Scribed by G. Thomas Budd; Kenneth D. Webster; Ronald R. Reimer; Pierre Martimbeau; Robert B. Livingston
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 324 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A retrospective analysis of 42 patients with stage 111, IV, or recurrcnt epithelial ovarian carcinoma treated with monthly cisplatin, Adriamycin, and cyclophosphamide (PAC) was made. Of 36 patients with measurable disease, 18 (50%) achieved a clinical complete response (CR) and 12 (33%) achieved a partial response (PR) for an objective response rate of 83 76. Six stage 111 patients remained without measurable disease after surgery and postopcrativc PAC and are included in the survival data. Thc median survival of all patients was 22 months (10 months for nonresponders), with a median duration of response of 15 months (19+ months for clinical complete responders). Of 16 patients who underwent second-look laparotomy while in clinical CR, 8 were pathologically free of disease. Of these 8 surgically staged CKs, 2 have suffered CNS relapses, while the rest remain free of disease. One additional patient, who had been found to have only microscopic disease at the time of second-look surgery, subsequently relapsed in the CNS, for a total of 3 patients with CNS relapse. We conclude that PAC is an effective regimen, but that prolonged survival of these patients may put them at greater risk for CNS relapse.
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