Delay in time to adjuvant chemotherapy and its impact on outcome in completely resected advanced ovarian malignancies treated with CRS, CRS+IP and CRS +HIPEC.

Authors

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Ashwin K Rajgopal

Manipal Comphrensive Cancer Center, Bangalore, India

Ashwin K Rajgopal , S.P. Somashekhar , Rohit Kumar C , Ramya Yethadka , Vijay Ahuja , Amit Rauthan , Poonam Patil

Organizations

Manipal Comphrensive Cancer Center, Bangalore, India, Manipal Comprehensive Cancer Center, Bangalore, India, Manipal Hospital, Bangalore, India

Research Funding

Other

Background: The relationship between initiation time of adjuvant chemotherapy in ovarian cancer and prognosis has remained controversial. This study was done to determine whether time from optimal cytoreductive surgery (CRS) to initiation of adjuvant chemotherapy impacts disease free & overall survival in advanced ovarian carcinoma. Methods: Total of 185 patients with primary advanced epithelial ovarian carcinoma (Stage IIIc or selected Stage IV), underwent optimal cytoreduction (either as upfront or interval) & adjuvant chemotherapy. The analysis of interval between day of surgery and start of adjuvant chemotherapy and its impact on outcome was done. Results: CRS with intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy either in the form of IP port or hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) was done in 135patients (60+ 75) and CRS alone in 50 patients. The median delay in starting adjuvant chemotherapy was 35 days for the whole cohort (32 days in the CRS group, 34 days in CRS+ IP group and 41 days in CRS+ HIPEC group). Delay in chemotherapy, as defined by more than 42 days had significant impact on DFS in CRS alone group (36 months vs 17 months: p = 0.02) had some impact in patients receiving intraperitoneal chemotherapy (38 versus 28 months; p = 0.78) & no impact on CRS+HIPEC group (35 vs 32 months; p = 0.17). In comparison to HIPEC vs non HIPEC group (CRS & CRS+IP), there was a meaningful impact on DFS with reference to delay in non HIPEC group ( 38 vs 22 months p = .08 whereas in the HIPEC group delay didn’t have any impact(35vs 32 months p = 017). There was trend towards better OS (88 vs 71 months p = 0.49). Conclusions: Delay in starting adjuvant chemotherapy certainly had impact on outcome with respect to CRS & CRS + IP arm (non HIPEC group) whereas the delay didn’t have an impact in the HIPEC group owing to the fact that single dose of chemotherapy during surgery in heated environment may substitute for the delay. However well designed clinical studies needs to be designed to evaluate the impact of single dose of intraperitoneal heated therapy & its interplay in delay on starting adjuvant chemotherapy.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2019 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type

Publication Only

Session Title

Gynecologic Cancer: Publication Only

Track

Gynecologic Cancer

Sub Track

Ovarian Cancer

Citation

J Clin Oncol 37, 2019 (suppl; abstr e17051)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2019.37.15_suppl.e17051

Abstract #

e17051

Abstract Disclosures