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The Analyses of Treatment Efficacy and Cost-effectiveness in Early-staged Ovarian Cancer Patients

Conditions
Ovarian Cancer
Registration Number
NCT03019315
Lead Sponsor
National Taiwan University Hospital
Brief Summary

Adjuvant chemotherapy was introduced in patients with early-stage ovarian cancer. The benefit of standard chemotherapeutic regimens including taxane has not been established. This study was conducted to investigate the influences of regimens of front-line chemotherapy on on recurrence and survival for early-stage ovarian adenocarcinoma. Further, the study will analyze cost-effectiveness of different regimens

Detailed Description

Ovarian carcinoma has become more and more important in recent years because it is the leading cause of death among all gynecologic malignancies. The annual incidence rate of ovarian cancer in the United States was 11.8 per 100,000 and the death rate was 7.8 per 100,000 in 2009. According to the Department of Health Bureau's report, the incidence rate of ovarian cancer was 8.46 per 100,000 in 2010 and the death rate was 2.8 per 100,000. No specific symptoms, difficulty in early diagnosis, insufficient accurate tumor markers, and a lack of information regarding ovarian tumor biology all contribute to a poor prognosis.

The standard treatment for ovarian cancer is surgical tumor debulking, followed by platinum-containing chemotherapy. The conventional adjuvant chemotherapeutic regimens of ovarian cancer are platinum combined with cyclophosphamide. Whereas, platinum combined with paclitaxel has been identified to be a better adjuvant chemotherapeutic regimens for those advance-staged disease. In United States, platinum combined with paclitaxel has been used as standard adjuvant chemotherapeutic regimens for all of ovarian cancer patients for decades. However, many countries including Taiwan still use platinum combined with cyclophosphamide as adjuvant chemotherapeutic regimens for early-staged ovarian cancer patients. There is no comprehensive result to demonstrate the differences between these two regimens the fields of efficacy, side effects, survival, cost-effectiveness, and so on. So the investigators conduct this study to answer the questions. This study will firstly focus on the early-staged ovarian cancer patients to analyze the data from the National Health Insurance (NHI) databank. Further this study will then validate the results from NHI databank from the cancer registration system of National Taiwan University Hospital.

There are several aims in this proposal. First, the study will evaluate the differences of efficacy including the response rate, side effects, disease-free survival, and overall survival of the patients between these two chemotherapeutic regimens. Second, the cost-effectiveness of these two chemotherapeutic regimens will be identified. The results of this study will provide a more comprehensive picture of selecting optimal chemotherapeutic regimens for early-staged ovarian cancer patients. It can also be an important reference for the pay-off of National Health Insurance.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
5000
Inclusion Criteria
  • (1) diagnosed at early stage, (2) treated with primary cytoreductive surgery followed by adjuvant platinum based chemotherapy
Exclusion Criteria
  • (1)patients with a history of cancer (2)patients had insufficient clinic-pathological and survival data regarding to disease prognosis

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
progression free survival5 years
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
over all survival5 years
response rate6 months

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

National Taiwan University

🇨🇳

Taipei, Taiwan

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