Investigator

Rafael Navarro

Md Anderson Cancer Center Madrid

RNRafael Navarro
Papers(1)
Oncological outcomes …
Collaborators(9)
Alvaro TejerizoAnna SerraAntonio Gil-MorenoBerta Díaz-FeijooCristina Martínez Can…Iacoponi SaraJesús Utrilla-LaynaJosé Miguel Cárdenas-…Pablo Padilla-Iserte
Institutions(10)
Md Anderson Cancer Ce…Hospital Universitari…Universitat Jaume IUniversitat Autònoma …Hospital Clínic de Ba…Hospital Son LlatzerHospital Universitari…Universidad Autónoma …Universidad CEU San P…Instituto De Investig…

Papers

Oncological outcomes of intraperitoneal chemotherapy in advanced ovarian cancer: BRCA mutation role

The knowledge of BRCA status offers a chance to evaluate the role of the intraperitoneal route in patients selected by biomolecular profiles after primary cytoreduction surgery in advanced ovarian cancer. We performed a retrospective, multicenter study to assess oncological outcomes depending on adjuvant treatment (intraperitoneal [IP] vs intravenous [IV]) and BRCA status (BRCA1/2 mutated vs. BRCA wild type [WT]). The primary endpoint was to determine progression-free survival. The secondary objectives were overall survival and toxicity. A total of 288 women from eight centers were included: 177 in the IP arm and 111 in the IV arm, grouped into four arms according to BRCA1/2 status. Significantly better PFS was observed in BRCA1/2-mutated patients with IP chemotherapy (HR: 0.35; 95% CI, 0.16-0.75, p = 0.007), which was not present in BRCA1/2-mutated patients with IV chemotherapy (HR: 0.65; 95% CI, 0.37-1.12, p = 0.14). Significantly better OS was also observed in IP chemotherapy (HR: 0.17; 95% CI, 0.06-043, p < 0.0001), but was not present in IV chemotherapy in relation with BRCA mutation (HR: 0.52; 95% CI, 0.22-1.27, p = 0.15). For BRCA WT patients, worse survival was observed regardless of the adjuvant route used. The IP route was more toxic compared to the IV route, but toxicity was equivalent at the long-term follow-up. This retrospective study suggests that BRCA status can help to offer an individualized, systematic treatment after optimal primary surgery for advanced ovarian cancer, but is limited by the small sample size. Prospective trials are essential to confirm these results.

2Works
1Papers
9Collaborators