4.6 Article

Quality of life from cytoreductive surgery in advanced ovarian cancer: Investigating the association between disease burden and surgical complexity in the international, prospective, SOCQER-2 cohort study

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.17041

Keywords

extensive surgery; ovarian cancer; quality of life; ultraradical surgery

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health and Care excellence
  2. Australian Society of Gynaecologic Oncologists Inc.
  3. Department of Science Technology, India - UKIERI grant
  4. Jiv Daya Foundation, USA

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This study aimed to investigate the quality of life (QoL) after surgical resection for advanced ovarian cancer and explore the association with surgical complexity and disease burden. The results showed that increasing surgical complexity did not lead to a decline in QoL. For patients with advanced ovarian cancer, higher surgical complexity was associated with greater improvement in postoperative QoL.
Objective To investigate quality of life (QoL) and association with surgical complexity and disease burden after surgical resection for advanced ovarian cancer in centres with variation in surgical approach. Design Prospective multicentre observational study. Setting Gynaecological cancer surgery centres in the UK, Kolkata, India, and Melbourne, Australia. Sample Patients undergoing surgical resection (with low, intermediate or high surgical complexity score, SCS) for late-stage ovarian cancer. Main Outcome Measures Primary: change in global score on the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) core quality-of-life questionnaire (QLQ-C30). Secondary: EORTC ovarian cancer module (OV28), progression-free survival. Results Patients' preoperative disease burden and SCS varied between centres, confirming differences in surgical ethos. QoL response rates were 90% up to 18 months. Mean change from the pre-surgical baseline in the EORTC QLQ-C30 was 3.4 (SD 1.8, n = 88) in the low, 4.0 (SD 2.1, n = 55) in the intermediate and 4.3 (SD 2.1, n = 52) in the high-SCS group after 6 weeks (p = 0.048), and 4.3 (SD 2.1, n = 51), 5.1 (SD 2.2, n = 41) and 5.1 (SD 2.2, n = 35), respectively, after 12 months (p = 0.133). In a repeated-measures model, there were no clinically or statistically meaningful differences in EORTC QLQ-C30 global scores between the three SCS groups (p = 0.840), but there was a small statistically significant improvement in all groups over time (p < 0.001). The high-SCS group experienced small to moderate decreases in physical (p = 0.004), role (p = 0.016) and emotional (p = 0.001) function at 6 weeks post-surgery, which resolved by 6-12 months. Conclusions The global QoL of patients undergoing low-, intermediate- and high-SCS surgery improved at 12 months after surgery and was no worse in patients undergoing extensive surgery. Tweetable Abstract Compared with surgery of lower complexity, extensive surgery does not result in poorer quality of life in patients with advanced ovarian cancer.

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