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Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2006 ASCO Annual Meeting Proceedings (Post-Meeting Edition).
Vol 24, No 18S (June 20 Supplement), 2006: 5060
© 2006 American Society of Clinical Oncology
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Abstract

CA125 nadir as a prognostic factor in advanced ovarian carcinoma: A retrospective study of 84 patients achieving clinical CR

H. Tanabe, N. Katsumata, K. Matsumoto, S. Nishio, Y. Kato, K. Yonemori, T. Kouno, C. Shimizu, M. Ando and Y. Fujiwara

National Cancer Center, Tokyo, Japan

5060

Background: There have been few reports of the relationship between CA125 nadir and the prognosis in patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma (AOC) who achieve a complete clinical response by multivariate analysis. Methods: CA125 nadir and the prognosis after the initial therapy (debulking surgery + first line chemotherapy) were retrospectively investigated in patients (pts) who had AOC meeting the criteria below and received therapy at National Cancer Center Hospital, between 1998 and 2004. The eligibility criteria were: 1) histological diagnosis of mullerian carcinoma, 2) FIGO stages III and IV, 3) a combination of platinum and taxane was administered as the first line chemotherapy, and 4) achieved clinically defined complete response (CR) after the initial therapy (ie, no cancer-related symptoms; normal physical examination, computed tomography scan of the abdomen/pelvis and chest x-ray). The possibility of CA125 nadir being a prognostic factor was investigated in pts who met these criteria by multivariate analysis (age (<50 years or 50 years≤), stage (III or IV), histological type (serous adenocarcinoma (serous) or non-serous), residual tumor diameter (<2 cm or 2 cm≤) and CA125 nadir (<10 U/ml or 10 U/ml≤)) using the Cox regression model. Results: There were 84 pts with a median age of 55.5 years (26–74). The stage was III in 59 pts and IV in 25 pts, the histological type was serous in 71 pts and non-serous in 13pts, and the residual tumor diameter was <2 cm in 72 pts and >2 cm in 12 pts and the median of CA125 before the initial therapy was 535 U/ml (13–28190), the CA125 nadir was <10 U/ml in 54 pts and 10 U/ml≤ in 30 pts, respectively. Regarding the prognosis, the median progression free survival (PFS) was 19 months (6–82), and the median overall survival (OS) was 36.5 months (10–82). By multivariate analysis, the CA125 nadir was significantly associated with the prognosis (hazard ratio of PFS was 0.39 (95% CI, 0.21–0.71), hazard ratio of OS was 0.28 (95% CI, 0.11–0.72)). Conclusion: CA125 nadir is a prognostic factor in patients with AOC who achieved clinically defined CR after the initial therapy, when the cut-off value was set to 10 U/ml. CA125 nadir may be an important factor for identifying pts for whom maintenance chemotherapy is effective.


Author Disclosure
Employment or Leadership Consultant or Advisory Role Stock Ownership Honoraria Research Funding Expert Testimony Other Remuneration

AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb KK, Kirin Brewery Company, Ltd, sanofi-aventis

Abstract presentation from the 2006 ASCO Annual Meeting




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Copyright © 2006 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1527-7755. Print ISSN: 0732-183X
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