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Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer

Epidemiologic analysis reveals that the mortality rate from ovarian cancer is continuously decreasing due to the improvement of surgery and chemotherapy. However, the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients is still unsatisfactory overall considering that only 30% of patients are alive after five years...

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Autores principales: Pisano, Carmela, Bruni, Giovanni S, Facchini, Gaetano, Marchetti, Claudia, Pignata, Sandro
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2695243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19753136
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author Pisano, Carmela
Bruni, Giovanni S
Facchini, Gaetano
Marchetti, Claudia
Pignata, Sandro
author_facet Pisano, Carmela
Bruni, Giovanni S
Facchini, Gaetano
Marchetti, Claudia
Pignata, Sandro
author_sort Pisano, Carmela
collection PubMed
description Epidemiologic analysis reveals that the mortality rate from ovarian cancer is continuously decreasing due to the improvement of surgery and chemotherapy. However, the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients is still unsatisfactory overall considering that only 30% of patients are alive after five years. In fact, although surgery and first-line systemic chemotherapy induces complete and partial response in up to 80% of patients with about a 25% pathological complete remission rate, recurrences occur in the majority of patients. The role of surgery in recurrent disease has been recently studied and many patients can receive an optimal secondary cytoreduction. Most of the recurrent patients are subject to a number of treatment regimens that, although palliative in nature, are also able to prolong survival. Important results have been obtained in particular in platinum-sensitive recurrent disease where a platinum-based chemotherapy is able to prolong progression-free survival and overall survival. Overall, our armamentarium for the treatment of progressive or recurrent ovarian cancer is significantly richer than in the past, and in many patients it is possible to achieve our goal of controlling the chronic behavior of the disease.
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spelling pubmed-26952432009-06-16 Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer Pisano, Carmela Bruni, Giovanni S Facchini, Gaetano Marchetti, Claudia Pignata, Sandro Ther Clin Risk Manag Review Epidemiologic analysis reveals that the mortality rate from ovarian cancer is continuously decreasing due to the improvement of surgery and chemotherapy. However, the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients is still unsatisfactory overall considering that only 30% of patients are alive after five years. In fact, although surgery and first-line systemic chemotherapy induces complete and partial response in up to 80% of patients with about a 25% pathological complete remission rate, recurrences occur in the majority of patients. The role of surgery in recurrent disease has been recently studied and many patients can receive an optimal secondary cytoreduction. Most of the recurrent patients are subject to a number of treatment regimens that, although palliative in nature, are also able to prolong survival. Important results have been obtained in particular in platinum-sensitive recurrent disease where a platinum-based chemotherapy is able to prolong progression-free survival and overall survival. Overall, our armamentarium for the treatment of progressive or recurrent ovarian cancer is significantly richer than in the past, and in many patients it is possible to achieve our goal of controlling the chronic behavior of the disease. Dove Medical Press 2009 2009-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2695243/ /pubmed/19753136 Text en © 2009 Pisano et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Pisano, Carmela
Bruni, Giovanni S
Facchini, Gaetano
Marchetti, Claudia
Pignata, Sandro
Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title_full Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title_fullStr Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title_full_unstemmed Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title_short Treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
title_sort treatment of recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2695243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19753136
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