|
NCI Announces preferred method of ovarian cancer treatment
Cancer Research of the Ozarks Participated in Clinical Trial
January 5, 2006
The National
Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National Institutes of Health, today issued
an announcement encouraging treatment with anticancer drugs via two methods,
after surgery, for women with advanced ovarian cancer. The combined methods,
which deliver drugs into a vein and directly into the abdomen, extend overall
survival for women with advanced ovarian cancer by about a year. Cancer Research
of the Ozarks, a joint venture between CoxHealth and St. John’s Health System,
participated in the NCI-supported clinical trial which led to this clinical
announcement.
The clinical announcement
to surgeons and other medical professionals who treat women with ovarian cancer
was made with the support of six professional societies and advocacy groups. The
announcement coincides with publication in the New England Journal of
Medicine* of the results of a large clinical trial by Deborah
Armstrong, M.D., medical oncologist and an associate professor at Johns Hopkins
Kimmel Cancer Center in Baltimore, Md., and her colleagues in an NCI-supported
research network known as the Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG).
This is the eighth trial evaluating the use of
chemotherapy delivered into the abdomen for ovarian cancer. Together, these
trials show a significant improvement in survival for women with advanced
ovarian cancer.
The two treatment methods
are called intravenous, or IV, for chemotherapy delivered into a vein and
intraperitoneal, or IP, for chemotherapy delivered into the abdominal, or
peritoneal, cavity. The Armstrong trial involved 429 women with stage III
ovarian cancer who were given chemotherapy following the successful surgical
removal of tumors. It compared two treatment regimens: 1) IV paclitaxel followed
by IV cisplatin, to 2) IV paclitaxel followed by IP cisplatin and the subsequent
administration of IP paclitaxel.
“Americans look to NCI—and to all
of the institutes that constitute the National Institutes of Health—for unbiased
research studies and sound counsel. This clinical announcement is a
demonstration of that commitment,” said NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D.
“The National Cancer Institute wants to make certain that the results of
clinical research are rapidly disseminated to both health care providers and
patients, in order to ensure that life-enhancing cancer treatments are widely
available,” said NCI Director Andrew C. von Eschenbach, M.D.
"IP therapy is not a new treatment approach, but it has not been widely accepted
as the gold standard for women with ovarian cancer," said Armstrong. "There has
been a prejudice against IP therapy in ovarian cancer because it's an old idea,
it requires skill and experience for the surgery and for the chemotherapy, and
it's more complicated than IV chemotherapy. But now we have firm data showing
that we should use a combination of IP and IV chemotherapy in most women with
advanced ovarian cancer who have had successful surgery to remove the bulk of
their tumor."
Standard treatment for women with stage III ovarian cancer has been surgical
removal of the tumor (debulking), followed by six to eight courses of IV
chemotherapy given every three weeks with a platinum drug,
such as cisplatin or
carboplatin, and a taxane drug, such as paclitaxel. Platinum and
taxane are two classes of anticancer drugs.The new NCI clinical announcement
Recommends that women with advanced ovarian cancer who undergo effective
surgical debulking receive a combination of IV and IP chemotherapy. IP
chemotherapy allows higher doses and more frequent administration of drugs, and
it appears to be more effective in killing cancer cells in the peritoneal
cavity, where ovarian cancer is likely to spread or recur first.
“In our trial, women who received part of
their chemotherapy via an IP route had a median survival time 16 months longer
than women who received only IV chemotherapy,” said Armstrong. The 205 women
treated via the IP route fared better, even though most of them received fewer
than the six planned treatments. Complications associated with the abdominal
catheter used to deliver the IP chemotherapy were the main reason only 86 of the
women completed all six IP treatments. Women who received IP chemotherapy had
more side effects than those treated with IV chemotherapy alone, but most side
effects were temporary and easily managed. One year after treatment, women in
both study groups had the same reported quality of
life.
“Randomized, multicenter clinical trials, including this most recent
study, clearly show the value of IP chemotherapy—an extended life for women with
advanced ovarian cancer,” said Philip DiSaia, M.D., chairman of the GOG.
"For most women who have had successful surgical removal of tumors to less than
one
centimeter in size, we now
know that the longest survival may be achieved by giving their chemotherapy
directly into the abdomen," said Beth Karlan, M.D., president of the Society of
Gynecologic Oncologists and director of Gynecologic Oncology and the Gilda
Radner Ovarian Cancer Program at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles,
Calif.
In response to this announcement, the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance's
outgoing president, Ginger Ackerman, and its executive director, Sherry Salway
Black, said the Alliance would widely disseminate this information on IP therapy
to their patient community. “We welcome the results of the recent trial that
demonstrates increased survivorship,” said Salway Black.
"It is important for women to have the facts about when it is appropriate to
consider IP chemotherapy," said Karl Podratz, M.D., Ph.D., chairman of the board
of the Gynecologic Cancer Foundation (GCF) and professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. "GCF looks forward to working
with NCI and the ovarian cancer community to educate women about the results of
this very important clinical trial, and what it means for women with advanced
ovarian cancer.”
Karen Stanley, R.N., M.S.N, president of the Oncology Nursing Society, and Susan
Vogt Temple, R.N., president of the Society of Gynecologic Nurse Oncologists,
noted that their societies have plans in place to teach oncology nurses and
women with ovarian cancer how IP chemotherapy can be given safely and reliably.
More studies are needed to
determine the best IP drug regimen and the optimal number of IP treatments.
Future trials also will address how to reduce toxicity associated with IP
administration.
FOR MEDIA INFORMATION, CONTACT ST. JOHN'S
MEDIA RELATIONS AT 417-820-2426 OR COXHEALTH CORPORATE COMMUNICATIONS AT
417-269-4113.
FOR MORE ABOUT CANCER RESEARCH OF THE OZARKS, CLICK HERE.
|