Changing Treatments for Changing Times
- Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is administered before surgical procedures and studies show that oncology outcomes are the same regardless of order.
- If neoadjuvant chemotherapy is effective, there will be clinical evidence that the cancer has regressed and women's overall health will improve.
- The treatment sequencing decision is made on a case-by-case basis.
An Updated Approach
“But in the last ten years or so, we’ve looked at something called neoadjuvant chemo, (chemo given prior to surgery) which means we start with three cycles of chemotherapy. Then we take a break and do surgery, and then we follow it up with three more cycles of chemotherapy.”
Read More- Better surgical outcomes
- Fewer post-surgery complications
- Time for patients to prepare themselves for surgery
The FDA has also approved another PARP inhibitor niraparib (brand name ZEJULA) for almost all women regardless of whether they have the BRCA mutation, as part of an initial course of treatment, or what's called front-line treatment.
Most recently, the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) released new guidelines recommending PARP inhibitors be offered to women, with or without genetic mutations, who are newly diagnosed with stage III or IV ovarian cancer and have improved with chemotherapy.
The Goal: Optimal Surgery
“One of the strongest predictors of ovarian cancer survival is an optimal surgery,” says Dr. Chapman. “This means that, at the time of surgery, all of the visible disease is removed.” Unfortunately, in cases where the cancer has wrapped itself around crucial blood vessels near the liver — or spread into the lungs, she notes, “sometimes, that’s just not possible. There are places where we just simply cannot optimally reduce the volume of the cancer if we start with surgery.”
In these cases, the new strategy – with chemo given ahead of surgery — can make the difference.
“Chemotherapy is really beneficial for those patients,” Dr. Chapman explains, “because it will decrease the volume of cancer and make their surgery more likely to be optimal.”
Doctors also consider the patient’s overall health. “I talk to patients about whether or not their bodies are physically capable of tolerating such a surgery,” she explains. In some cases, the time spent during neoadjuvant chemotherapy gives patients time to get themselves stronger and prepare for surgery.
Another positive finding from this research: When chemotherapy precedes surgery, complication rates go down.
An Individual Decision
Oncologists always keep in mind that an individual patient may not fit a particular study or statistic. “There might be some patients for whom surgery is better as a first strategy, ” Dr. Chapman acknowledges.
“And we certainly know that there are some patients for whom neoadjuvant chemo, starting with chemo, is the better strategy.” For this reason, the best strategy to approach ovarian cancer treatment is always an individual decision between a patient and her oncologist.
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