Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand

Chemotherapy is the primary treatment for advanced and recurrent cervical cancer. To evaluate the survival outcomes of chemotherapy and the prognostic factors in this setting, we conducted a retrospective study by reviewing the medical records of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treat...

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Main Authors: Kuanoon Boupaijit, Prapaporn Suprasert
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/55218
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-552182018-09-05T03:09:52Z Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand Kuanoon Boupaijit Prapaporn Suprasert Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Medicine Chemotherapy is the primary treatment for advanced and recurrent cervical cancer. To evaluate the survival outcomes of chemotherapy and the prognostic factors in this setting, we conducted a retrospective study by reviewing the medical records of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with systemic chemotherapy at our institute between January, 2008 and December, 2014. One hundred and seventy-three patients met the criteria with a mean age of 50.9 years. 4.1% of them were HIV positive. The most common initial stage was stage IVB (30.1%) and the most common histology was squamous cell carcinoma (68.6%). Ninety-two (53.2%) patients were previously treated with concurrent chemoradiation with 53% developing combined sites of recurrence. The median recurrence free interval was 16.7 months. Cisplatin + 5 fluorouracil (5FU) (53.2%) was the most frequent first line chemotherapy followed by carboplatin + paclitaxel (20.2%) with an objective response of 39.3%. Seventy-two patients received subsequent chemotherapy. The median overall survival of all studied patients was 13.2 months. Only a recurrence free interval of less than 12 months was an independent prognostic factor for survival outcome. In conclusion, chemotherapy treatment for advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients showed modest efficacy with a shorter recurrence free survival less than 12 months as a significant poor prognosis factor. 2018-09-05T02:53:14Z 2018-09-05T02:53:14Z 2016-04-19 Journal 15137368 2-s2.0-84965054297 10.7314/APJCP.2016.17.3.1123 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84965054297&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/55218
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Medicine
spellingShingle Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Medicine
Kuanoon Boupaijit
Prapaporn Suprasert
Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
description Chemotherapy is the primary treatment for advanced and recurrent cervical cancer. To evaluate the survival outcomes of chemotherapy and the prognostic factors in this setting, we conducted a retrospective study by reviewing the medical records of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with systemic chemotherapy at our institute between January, 2008 and December, 2014. One hundred and seventy-three patients met the criteria with a mean age of 50.9 years. 4.1% of them were HIV positive. The most common initial stage was stage IVB (30.1%) and the most common histology was squamous cell carcinoma (68.6%). Ninety-two (53.2%) patients were previously treated with concurrent chemoradiation with 53% developing combined sites of recurrence. The median recurrence free interval was 16.7 months. Cisplatin + 5 fluorouracil (5FU) (53.2%) was the most frequent first line chemotherapy followed by carboplatin + paclitaxel (20.2%) with an objective response of 39.3%. Seventy-two patients received subsequent chemotherapy. The median overall survival of all studied patients was 13.2 months. Only a recurrence free interval of less than 12 months was an independent prognostic factor for survival outcome. In conclusion, chemotherapy treatment for advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients showed modest efficacy with a shorter recurrence free survival less than 12 months as a significant poor prognosis factor.
format Journal
author Kuanoon Boupaijit
Prapaporn Suprasert
author_facet Kuanoon Boupaijit
Prapaporn Suprasert
author_sort Kuanoon Boupaijit
title Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
title_short Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
title_full Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
title_fullStr Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: Experience of northern tertiary care hospital in Thailand
title_sort survival outcomes of advanced and recurrent cervical cancer patients treated with chemotherapy: experience of northern tertiary care hospital in thailand
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84965054297&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/55218
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