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Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis

No randomised trials have addressed the value of systematic aortic and pelvic lymphadenectomy (SL) in ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis. This study was conducted to investigate the role of SL compared with lymph nodes sampling (CONTROL) in the management of early stage ovarian ca...

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Autores principales: Maggioni, A, Benedetti Panici, P, Dell'Anna, T, Landoni, F, Lissoni, A, Pellegrino, A, Rossi, R S, Chiari, S, Campagnutta, E, Greggi, S, Angioli, R, Manci, N, Calcagno, M, Scambia, G, Fossati, R, Floriani, I, Torri, V, Grassi, R, Mangioni, C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2360519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16940979
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603323
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author Maggioni, A
Benedetti Panici, P
Dell'Anna, T
Landoni, F
Lissoni, A
Pellegrino, A
Rossi, R S
Chiari, S
Campagnutta, E
Greggi, S
Angioli, R
Manci, N
Calcagno, M
Scambia, G
Fossati, R
Floriani, I
Torri, V
Grassi, R
Mangioni, C
author_facet Maggioni, A
Benedetti Panici, P
Dell'Anna, T
Landoni, F
Lissoni, A
Pellegrino, A
Rossi, R S
Chiari, S
Campagnutta, E
Greggi, S
Angioli, R
Manci, N
Calcagno, M
Scambia, G
Fossati, R
Floriani, I
Torri, V
Grassi, R
Mangioni, C
author_sort Maggioni, A
collection PubMed
description No randomised trials have addressed the value of systematic aortic and pelvic lymphadenectomy (SL) in ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis. This study was conducted to investigate the role of SL compared with lymph nodes sampling (CONTROL) in the management of early stage ovarian cancer. A total of 268 eligible patients with macroscopically intrapelvic ovarian carcinoma were randomised to SL (N=138) or CONTROL (N=130). The primary objective was to compare the proportion of patients with retroperitoneal nodal involvement between the two groups. Median operating time was longer and more patients required blood transfusions in the SL arm than the CONTROL arm (240 vs 150 min, P<0.001, and 36 vs 22%, P=0.012, respectively). More patients in the SL group had positive nodes at histologic examination than patients on CONTROL (9 vs 22%, P=0.007). Postoperative chemotherapy was delivered in 66% and 51% of patients with negative nodes on CONTROL and SL, respectively (P=0.03). At a median follow-up of 87.8 months, the adjusted risks for progression (hazard ratio [HR]=0.72, 95%CI=0.46–1.21, P=0.16) and death (HR=0.85, 95%CI=0.49–1.47, P=0.56) were lower, but not statistically significant, in the SL than the CONTROL arm. Five-year progression-free survival was 71.3 and 78.3% (difference=7.0%, 95% CI=–3.4–14.3%) and 5-year overall survival was 81.3 and 84.2% (difference=2.9%, 95% CI=−7.0–9.2%) respectively for CONTROL and SL. SL detects a higher proportion of patients with metastatic lymph nodes. This trial may have lacked power to exclude clinically important effects of SL on progression free and overall survival.
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spelling pubmed-23605192009-09-10 Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis Maggioni, A Benedetti Panici, P Dell'Anna, T Landoni, F Lissoni, A Pellegrino, A Rossi, R S Chiari, S Campagnutta, E Greggi, S Angioli, R Manci, N Calcagno, M Scambia, G Fossati, R Floriani, I Torri, V Grassi, R Mangioni, C Br J Cancer Clinical Study No randomised trials have addressed the value of systematic aortic and pelvic lymphadenectomy (SL) in ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis. This study was conducted to investigate the role of SL compared with lymph nodes sampling (CONTROL) in the management of early stage ovarian cancer. A total of 268 eligible patients with macroscopically intrapelvic ovarian carcinoma were randomised to SL (N=138) or CONTROL (N=130). The primary objective was to compare the proportion of patients with retroperitoneal nodal involvement between the two groups. Median operating time was longer and more patients required blood transfusions in the SL arm than the CONTROL arm (240 vs 150 min, P<0.001, and 36 vs 22%, P=0.012, respectively). More patients in the SL group had positive nodes at histologic examination than patients on CONTROL (9 vs 22%, P=0.007). Postoperative chemotherapy was delivered in 66% and 51% of patients with negative nodes on CONTROL and SL, respectively (P=0.03). At a median follow-up of 87.8 months, the adjusted risks for progression (hazard ratio [HR]=0.72, 95%CI=0.46–1.21, P=0.16) and death (HR=0.85, 95%CI=0.49–1.47, P=0.56) were lower, but not statistically significant, in the SL than the CONTROL arm. Five-year progression-free survival was 71.3 and 78.3% (difference=7.0%, 95% CI=–3.4–14.3%) and 5-year overall survival was 81.3 and 84.2% (difference=2.9%, 95% CI=−7.0–9.2%) respectively for CONTROL and SL. SL detects a higher proportion of patients with metastatic lymph nodes. This trial may have lacked power to exclude clinically important effects of SL on progression free and overall survival. Nature Publishing Group 2006-09-18 2006-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2360519/ /pubmed/16940979 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603323 Text en Copyright © 2006 Cancer Research UK https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material.If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Clinical Study
Maggioni, A
Benedetti Panici, P
Dell'Anna, T
Landoni, F
Lissoni, A
Pellegrino, A
Rossi, R S
Chiari, S
Campagnutta, E
Greggi, S
Angioli, R
Manci, N
Calcagno, M
Scambia, G
Fossati, R
Floriani, I
Torri, V
Grassi, R
Mangioni, C
Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title_full Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title_fullStr Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title_full_unstemmed Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title_short Randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
title_sort randomised study of systematic lymphadenectomy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer macroscopically confined to the pelvis
topic Clinical Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2360519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16940979
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603323
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