Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the efficacy and hematologic toxicity of salvage chemotherapy in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer following high-dose chemotherapy and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT).
Methods: A retrospective analysis of 19 Massachusetts General Hospital case records of women with relapsed ovarian cancer following PBSCT was conducted.
Results: Between February 1996 and September 1998, 24 women with ovarian cancer were treated with PBSCT. Nine patients were treated with an upfront PBSCT regimen to consolidate first-line chemotherapy and 15 patients were treated with PBSCT after a median of two lines (range: 1-3) of prior chemotherapy. Sixteen patients presented with relapsed disease at a median of 230 days post-PBSCT and 3 patients had persistent disease through high-dose chemotherapy. Each of these 19 patients has been treated with salvage chemotherapy following PBSCT. Patients received one of six different first-line salvage chemotherapy regimens. Sixteen of nineteen patients are alive a median of 383 days (range: 156-868) after relapse following PBSCT. Three patients died of progressive disease at a median of 284 days (range: 224-648) after post-PBSCT relapse. Six patients achieved a complete response, four patients had a partial response, three patients had stable disease, and six patients had progressive disease in response to first-line salvage chemotherapy. Seven patients experienced grade III/IV neutropenia, and three patients experienced grade III/IV thrombocytopenia.
Conclusions: We conclude that in a patient population selected for chemotherapy sensitive and low-volume disease prior to PBSCT, patients with recurrent tumor appear to respond to salvage chemotherapy, and associated hematologic toxicity is acceptable and manageable.
Copyright 2000 Academic Press.