Does Aggressive Therapy Improve Survival in Suboptimal Stage IIIc/IV Ovarian Cancer? A Canadian–American Comparative Study

1995 
Abstract In an effort to determine if differences exist in the treatment and outcome of patients with suboptimally debulked stage IIIc and IV epithelial ovarian cancer between two tertiary-care cancer centers in Canada and the United States, we conducted a comparative study. The records of all patients who underwent treatment for epithelial ovarian cancer at two tertiary-care cancer centers in Canada and the United States between 1987 and 1989 were abstracted onto a common datasheet which was then entered into a computerized database for analysis. Only patients with suboptimally debulked stage IIIc disease (residual tumor diameter > 1 cm) or stage IV were included in the comparative study. There was a total of 129 evaluable patients (61 Canadian, 68 American). There were no statistically significant differences between the centers in mean age, performance status, histology, grade, or stage distribution. During the period of this study there was no statistically significant difference between the two institutions in the proportion of patients in whom optimal debulking was achieved (Canadian 19%, American 26%). The American patients were heavier than the Canadian patients (Quetelet index 27.3 vs 23.8, P P P P
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