Background: This study reviews the experience at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center with elderly patients treated for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer with cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy.
Methods: From 1978 through 1988, 215 patients with Stage III or IV, Grade 2 or 3 epithelial ovarian cancer were entered onto one of three consecutive trials involving cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy. The treatment plans were as follows: Trial 1: 12 cycles of cisplatin-melphalan (75 patients); Trial 2: 12 cycles of cisplatin-cyclophosphamide (49 patients); and Trial 3: 6 cycles of cisplatin-cyclophosphamide (91 patients). End-points of analysis included the effect of age on other prognostic factors, clinical response rate, surgical response rate, toxicity, progression-free survival, and survival.
Results: Of the entire study group, 57 patients (27%) were 65 years of age and older at diagnosis. There was no effect of age on FIGO stage or histologic grade distribution, but 61% of patients younger than 65 years of age had residual tumors less than or equal to 2 cm compared with only 33% of patients 65 years of age and older (P = 0.00027). There were no differences between the two age groups with respect to response rates, recurrence rate after negative second-look surgery, toxicity, or progression-free survival. Patients in the younger than 65 years of age group, however, had a significantly longer median survival time than those 65 years of age and older (30 versus 19 months, respectively) (P = 0.0038).
Conclusions: This analysis suggests that elderly patients are more likely to begin chemotherapy with bulky residual disease and to have a significantly shorter survival time than their younger counterparts.