The following articles
appeared in this month's issues of the surveyed journals. Articles that
seem to be of most interest to the practicing gynecologic oncologist are
included. The journals that are surveyed are
New England Journal of
Medicine, Journal of Clinical Oncology,
Gynecologic Oncology,
Cancer,
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Lancet, Cancer Research,
Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Journal of the National Cancer Institute,
Journal of the American Medical Association
and American Journal of Surgical Pathology.
The participants in this program are the active clinical fellows at
Memorial Hospital: Christopher Awtrey, Sarah Ferguson, Alan Schlaerth,
Destin Black, Margrit Juretzka, and Eric Eisenhauer. The managing editor is Douglas Levine. Comments, questions,
complaints and suggestions are always welcome, please E-mail us at:
VJC@smgo.org or
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Gynecologic Oncology – Alan C.
Schlaerth
Title: Association of hemoglobin level with survival in cervical
carcinoma patients treated with concurrent cisplatin and radiotherapy: a
GOG Study
Authors: William E. Winter, III ,
G. Larry Maxwel, Chunqiao Tian, Eugene Sobel, G. Scott Rose, Gillian
Thomas and Jay W. Carlson
Source: Gynecologic Oncology,
Volume 94, Issue 2, August 2004, Pages 495-501.
Summary: The authors investigated the relationship of hemoglobin
level before or during concurrent cisplatin and radiotherapy (RT) with
disease outcome in women with locally advanced cervical cancer. They
retrospectively reviewed 494 patients treated on two consecutive
prospective GOG trials. 278 (56%) and 216 (44%) were diagnosed with Stage
II and Stage III/IV disease, respectively. Controlling for age, race,
performance status, disease stage, tumor size, cell type, and duration of
radiotherapy, mean hemoglobin values during treatment were predictive of
disease progression (P < 0.0001). When the 6-week treatment course
was divided into 2-week periods (early, middle, and late), analysis
revealed hemoglobin values during the late period were the most predictive
of disease progression (P = 0.0289). Hemoglobin levels during
combined radiotherapy and cisplatin were independent predictors of
treatment outcome. Levels in the last part of treatment were the
most predictive of disease recurrence and survival.
Click here for abstract from
Gynecologic Oncology
Title: Surgical-pathological predictors of disease-free survival and
risk groupings for IB2 cervical cancer: do the traditional models still
apply?
Authors: Scott A. Kamelle, Teresa
L. Rutledge, Todd D. Tillmanns, Natalie S. Gould, David E. Cohn, Jason
Wright, Thomas J. Herzog, Janet S. Rader, Michael A. Gold, Gary A. Johnson
Joan L. Walker, Robert S.
Mannel and D. Scott McMeekin
Source: Gynecologic Oncology,
Volume 94, Issue 2, August 2004, Pages 249-255.
Summary: This study evaluated patients from two institutions to
determine how independent predictors of recurrence for stage IB2 cervical
cancers treated with radical hysterectomy (RH) apply to established risk
models. The authors separated patients into three risk classifications:
high risk (HR) with positive nodes, parametria, or margins; intermediate
risk (IR) positive LVSI with any cervical stromal invasion (CSI), or
negative LVSI with greater than middle CSI; and low risk (LR) with absence
of HR or IR characteristics. The 86 patients with stage IB2 tumors
treated with RH were comprised of 34% HR, 60% IR, and 6% LR. Univariate
predictors of recurrence were pelvic nodal disease, positive LVSI,
positive parametria, outer 1/3 CSI, and tumor size >6cm. Multivariate
analysis identified LVSI as the only independent predictor of recurrence
(RR 5.2, P=0.03). The authors concluded that IR patients with negative
LVSI and all LR patients did well with surgery alone. They emphasize the
independent importance of LVSI and question the utility of published IR
models when applied to stage IB2 cervical cancer.
Click here for abstract from
Gynecologic Oncology
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Journal of Clinical Oncology
- Christopher S. Awtrey
Title: Phase III Study of Cisplatin
With or Without Paclitaxel in Stage IVB, Recurrent, or Persistent Squamous
Cell Carcinoma of the Cervix: A Gynecologic Oncology Group Study
Authors:
Moore, David H.,
Blessing, John A., McQuellon, Richard P., Thaler, Howard T., Cella, David,
Benda, Jo, Miller, David S., Olt, George, King, Stephanie, Boggess, John
F., Rocereto, Thomas F
Source:
J Clin Oncol
2004 22: 3113-3119
Summary: This GOG study (#169) compared cisplatin 50 mg/m2
with or without Taxol 135 mg/m2 given every 3 weeks for 6
cycles, in patients with advanced or recurrent cervical cancer. 134
patients received cisplatin and 130 received combination therapy. The
response rate for the cisplatin alone was 19% and 36% in the combination
group. PFS was 2.8 months for the single agent versus 4.8 months for the
combination. There was no difference between the groups with respect to
the QOL scores or the median survival, 8.8 months for the single agent and
9.7 months for the combination. Not surprisingly there was a difference in
toxicity with 65% of the combination group developed grade 3 or 4
neutropenia as opposed to 4 % of the single agent group. The authors
conclude that the combination is superior to single agent cisplatin with
respect to response rate and PFS with no improvement in overall survival.
Click here for abstract from
JCO
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Journal of the National Cancer
Institute – Margrit M. Juretzka
Nothing of interest this month
Obstetrics and Gynecology
– Destin R. Black
Title: Does Tamoxifen Use Affect
Prognosis in Breast Cancer Patients Who Develop Endometrial Cancer?
Authors:
Slomovitz, Brian
M., Sun, Charlotte C., Ramirez, Pedro T., Bodurka, Diane C., Diaz, Paul,
Lu, Karen H.
Source:
Obstet Gynecol
2004 104: 255-260
Summary: This retrospective review of 89 patients with a history of
breast cancer that later developed endometrial cancer found that 52%
(46/89) had a history of tamoxifen use (median duration 48 months; range
2-120 months). There was no significant difference
in the clinical or pathologic features between tamoxifen users and
nonusers. In addition, there was no significant difference in overall
survival between tamoxifen users and nonusers (39.2 months versus 48.3
months, P = .27)
There was, however, a shorter interval from breast cancer diagnosis to
endometrial cancer diagnosis (77.2 versus 121.3 months for nonusers;
P = .01) associated
with a history of tamoxifen use . The authors concluded that tamoxifen use
was not a prognostic factor for overall survival.
Click here for abstract from
OB/GYN
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Title: Surgical Staging of Ovarian
Low Malignant Potential Tumors
Authors:
Rao, Gautam G.,
Skinner, Elizabeth, Gehrig, Paola A., Duska, Linda R., Coleman, Robert L.,
Schorge, John O.
Source:
Obstet Gynecol
2004 104: 261-266
Summary: Between 1984 and 2003, 248 women with
low malignant potential tumors of the ovary were identified at 3
institutions. One hundred eighty-three (74%) of 248 women were surgically
staged. Forty of 183 staged patients had obvious extra-ovarian disease at
the time of surgery. Forty (28%) of the remaining 143 women with disease
confined to the ovary were upstaged. 28 cases had positive cytologic
washings, 10 had microscopic implants detected by peritoneal or omental
biopsy, and 2 were upstaged to stage IIIC on the basis of nodal disease.
One hundred eighteen women underwent pelvic node dissection (median: 5
nodes), and 86 underwent para-aortic node dissection (median: 2 nodes).
Seven (6%) patients had positive pelvic lymph nodes. All para-aortic
nodes were negative. Length of hospital stay (P
< .001) and intraoperative blood loss (P
< .001) were increased in women who were surgically staged. Eight (3%) of
248 patients received adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy. After a median
follow-up of 28 (range, 1–208) months,
fifteen (6%) recurrences developed and 1 (0.4%) death occurred. The
authors concluded that pelvic and para-aortic lymph node dissection is not
necessary in the majority of women with ovarian low malignant potential
tumors.
Click here for abstract from
OB/GYN
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American Journal of Obstetrics
and Gynecology – Margrit M. Juretzka
Title: Completion hysterectomy after radiation therapy for bulky
cervical cancer stages IB, IIA, and IIB: Complications and survival rates
Authors: Melissa A. Decker, James
J. Burke II, Donald G. Gallup, Robert W. Silverio, David Weems, John
Duttenhaver and Dent Purcell
Source: American Journal of
Obstetrics and Gynecology, Volume 191, Issue 2, August 2004, Pages
654-658.
Summary: The authors performed a retrospective review of 55 patients
with bulky cervical CA (IB-IIB) who were treated with radiation followed
by completion hysterectomy between 1993 and 2002. 54 patients received
brachytherapy, 53 patients received external beam radiotherapy and 29
patients received cisplatin-sensitizing chemotherapy. Early
post-operative complications occurred in 21.8% of patients and late
complications occurred in 19.6%. Of the 51 patients with follow-up data
(median follow-up 39 months), 72.5% are free of disease, 21.6% died of
disease, and 5.9% were alive with disease. The authors conclude that
complications with combined modalities were comparable to complications
from either modality alone and may be a reasonable treatment strategy to
treat potential residual carcinoma.
Click here for abstract from
Am J OB/GYN
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New England Journal of
Medicine – Christopher S. Awtrey
Nothing of interest this month
Journal of the American
Medical Association – Destin R. Black
Nothing of interest this month
Cancer
– Sarah E. Ferguson
Nothing of interest this month
Lancet
– Destin R. Black
Nothing of interest this month
Cancer Research
– Eric Eisenhauer
Title: Three Biomarkers Identified
from Serum Proteomic Analysis for the Detection of Early Stage Ovarian
Cancer
Authors:
Zhang, Zhen,
Bast, Robert C., Jr., Yu, Yinhua, Li, Jinong, Sokoll, Lori J., Rai, Alex
J., Rosenzweig, Jason M., Cameron, Bonnie, Wang, Young Y., Meng, Xiao-Ying,
Berchuck, Andrew, van Haaften-Day, Carolien, Hacker, Neville F., de Bruijn,
Henk W. A., van der Zee, Ate G. J., Jacobs, Ian J., Fung, Eric T., Chan,
Daniel W.
Source:
Cancer Res 2004
64: 5882-5890
Summary: Investigators from 5
different centers performed a case-control analysis of serum proteomic
expression for the detection early stage ovarian cancer. Serum samples
were analyzed from 153 patients with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer
(65 stage I/II, 88 stage II/IV), 42 with other ovarian cancers (28
borderline, 14 recurrent), 166 with benign pelvic masses and 142 healthy
women. Proteomic expression profiling was performed using SELDI/TOF on
the ProteinChip Biomarker System
from Ciphergen. The identified proteins revealed biomarkers which
were then tested by immunoassay on samples from 41 healthy women, 41
patients with ovarian cancer and 20 each with breast, colon and prostate
cancers. Three biomarkers were identified, two which were downregulated
(apolipoprotein A1 and truncated transthyretin) and one which was
upregulated (a trypsin inhibitor heavy chain fragment). In patients with
early stage invasive epithelial ovarian cancer, combining these three
biomarkers and CA125 in a multivariate model showed improved sensitivity
(74%) vs. CA125 alone (65%), with matched specificity of 97%. This
sensitivity could be improved by adding sonography or additional markers
as they are revealed. Though the sensitivity is still to low to consider
clinical applications, the authors emphasize the potential to improve
serum screening through identification of these biomarkers.
Click here for abstract from
Cancer Res
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American Journal of Surgical Pathology
–
Sarah E. Ferguson
Nothing of interest this month
This issue of the Virtual Journal Club is sponsored by
GlaxoSmithKline.