Open Access
A Meta‐Analysis on the Impact of Platinum‐Based Adjuvant Treatment on the Outcome of Borderline Ovarian Tumors With Invasive Implants
Author(s) -
Vasconcelos Ines,
Olschewski Jessica,
Braicu Ioana,
Sehouli Jalid
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the oncologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.176
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1549-490X
pISSN - 1083-7159
DOI - 10.1634/theoncologist.2014-0144
Subject(s) - medicine , oncology , adjuvant , meta analysis , outcome (game theory) , ovarian cancer , cancer , mathematics , mathematical economics
Background. Treatment of borderline ovarian tumors (BOTs) remains contentious, and there is no consensus regarding therapy for BOTs with invasive implants (BOTi). The benefits of platinum‐based adjuvant treatment were evaluated in patients with BOTi at primary diagnosis. Methods. The PubMed database was systematically searched for articles using the following terms: ((borderline) OR (low malignant potential) AND (ovarian)) AND ((tumor) OR (cancer)) AND (invasive implants) AND ((follow‐up) OR (survival) OR (treatment) OR (chemotherapy) OR (adjuvant treatment) OR (surgery) OR (surgical treatment)). Results. We identified 27 articles including 3,124 patients, 181 with invasive implants. All studies provided information regarding mortality or recurrence rates. Central pathological examination was performed in 19 studies. Eight studies included more than 75% stage I patients; 7 included only advanced‐stage patients, and 14 included only serous BOT. The pooled recurrence estimates for both treatment groups (adjuvant treatment: 44.0%, upfront surgery: 21.3%) did not differ significantly ( p = .114). A meta‐analysis of the 6 studies providing separate mortality data for both treatment groups favored surgical treatment only, but this difference did not reach statistical significance (.05 < p < .1; odds ratio: 0.33; 95% confidence interval: 0.09–1.71; p = .086). We were unable to pool the results of the included studies because not all studies registered events in both treatment groups. Egger's regression indicated low asymmetry of the studies ( p = .39), and no heterogeneity was found (I 2 = 0%). Conclusion. We did not find evidence supporting platinum‐based adjuvant therapy for BOT with invasive implants.