Background: Patients with epithelial ovarian cancer are often diagnosed with advanced disease; hence they have a generally poor survival rate. The main objective was to assess the clinical effectiveness of the four main treatment options in the primary treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: i) adjuvant chemotherapy and/or adjuvant radiotherapy, ii) cytoreductive surgery, iii) neoadjuvant chemotherapy in advanced disease, and iv) postoperative chemotherapy in advanced disease.
Material And Methods: The scientific literature was identified by searches in Medline, Embase and Cochrane CCTR and by additional manual searches. Using criteria defined by protocol, two reviewers assessed each study according to relevance, quality and validity. Among 2227 publications identified, 635 were read as full-text articles, and 90 studies were critically assessed as relevant publications. All included studies were systematised in three subgroups according to the quality of the study design in question and the validity of the results: high, moderate, or low. A total of 45 studies of high or moderate quality form the documentary basis for this review.
Results: Current data are inconclusive regarding the effect of adjuvant chemotherapy. Retrospective data show a survival advantage for patients who have had maximum cytoreductive surgery. The effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy is uncertain. Several questions remain unanswered despite wide acceptance of paclitaxel-carboplatin as the current standard in first-line treatment.
Interpretation: This systematic review demonstrates the need for more clinical studies.
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Curr Mol Med
January 2025
Department of Laboratory, Imam Khomeini Hospital Complex, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Niraparib was approved for first-line (1L) maintenance (1LM) treatment of patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) following the PRIMA/ENGOT-OV26/GOG-3012 (PRIMA) trial. PRIMA was restricted to patients at higher risk of progression (excluded stage III EOC with no visible residual disease [NVRD] after primary cytoreductive surgery [PCS]). This retrospective study evaluated the potential impact of excluding stage III EOC with NVRD from PRIMA by assessing real-world treatment outcomes following 1LM niraparib monotherapy in this patient population.
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