Secondary surgical cytoreduction is feasible, with acceptable postoperative morbidity, but falls short of improving overall survival in patients with platinum-sensitive, recurrent ovarian cancer, according to study.
A total of 485 patients were randomized to undergo secondary surgical cytoreduction and then receive platinum-based chemotherapy (n=240) or to receive platinum-based chemotherapy alone (n=245). Decision on use of adjuvant chemotherapy (paclitaxel–carboplatin or gemcitabine–carboplatin) and bevacizumab was left to the investigators.
Over a median follow-up of 48.1 months, complete gross resection was achieved in 67 percent of the patients who underwent the procedure. Eighty-four percent of the population were given platinum-based chemotherapy with bevacizumab followed by bevacizumab maintenance, with the proportion similar in the two treatment groups.
Median overall survival was shorter in the surgery than in the no-surgery group (50.6 vs 64.7 months; hazard ratio [HR] for death, 1.29, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.97–1.72; p=0.08). The estimate remained the same despite adjustment for platinum-free interval and chemotherapy choice.
Median progression-free survival was 18.9 months in the surgery group and 16.2 months in the no-surgery group (HR for disease progression or death, 0.82, 95 percent CI, 0.66–1.01). The 30-day surgical morbidity rate was 9 percent, and one patient (0.4 percent) died from postoperative complications.
Patient-reported quality of life was poor after surgery but did not differ than in the no-surgery group after recovery.