Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
In women with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AOC), neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) combined with interval cytoreductive surgery and post-operative chemotherapy is an option.
Several retrospective studies have demonstrated the feasibility of minimally invasive surgery in case of a good response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and prospective randomised trial is currently underway to demonstrate the non-inferiority of minimally invasive surgery compared to laparotomy in patients with an optimal response after 3-4 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (LANCE trial, NCT04575935).
The aim of our study is to evaluate the feasibility of interval surgery after at least VI cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with a minimally invasive approach.
Full description
In women with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AOC), neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) combined with interval cytoreductive surgery (ICS) and post-operative chemotherapy is an option. Four randomised trials (EORTC55971, CHORUS, JCOG0602, SCORPION) have shown that survival rates after NACT are similar to those after primary cytoreductive surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy.
The use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy has increased significantly in recent years, and it has been shown that the determining prognostic factor is the achievement of an absent residual tumour at surgery. However, the optimal number of neoadjuvant chemotherapy cycles is not yet well defined. Several retrospective studies have evaluated the efficacy of interval debulking surgery after performing more than 4 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In these studies, the percentage of patients undergoing >4 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy varied in a range of approximately 22% to 45%. Currently, several randomised trials are ongoing, evaluating the optimal number of neoadjuvant chemotherapy cycles (3 vs. 6 cycles) in terms of complete cytoreduction (GOGER, NCT02125513) and survival (CHRONO, NCT03579394).
Several retrospective studies have demonstrated the feasibility of minimally invasive surgery in case of a good response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (median neoadjuvant chemotherapy cycles: 4). Therefore, a prospective randomised trial is currently underway to demonstrate the non-inferiority in terms of progression-free survival of minimally invasive surgery compared to laparotomy in patients with an optimal response after 3-4 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (LANCE trial, NCT04575935).
The aim of our study is to evaluate the feasibility of interval surgery after at least VI cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with a minimally invasive approach.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Central trial contact
Carmine Conte
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal