4 research outputs found
ESMO management and treatment adapted recommendations in the COVID-19 era: gynaecological malignancies
The rapid spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus 2 infection and its related disease (COVID-19)
has required an immediate and coordinate healthcare
response to face the worldwide emergency and define
strategies to maintain the continuum of care for the
non-COVID-19 diseases while protecting patients and
healthcare providers. The dimension of the COVID-19
pandemic poses an unprecedented risk especially for the
more vulnerable populations. To manage patients with
cancer adequately, maintaining the highest quality of
care, a definition of value-based priorities is necessary
to define which interventions can be safely postponed
without affecting patients’ outcome. The European
Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has endorsed a
tiered approach across three different levels of priority
(high, medium, low) incorporating information on the
value-based prioritisation and clinical cogency of the
interventions that can be applied for different disease
sites. Patients with gynaecological cancer are at particular
risk of COVID-19 complications because of their age and
prevalence of comorbidities. The definition of priority
level should be based on tumour stage and histology,
cancer-related symptoms or complications, aim (curative
vs palliative) and magnitude of benefit of the oncological
intervention, patients’ general condition and preferences.
The decision-making process always needs to consider
the disease-specific national and international guidelines
and the local healthcare system and social resources,
and a changing situation in relation to COVID-19 infection.
These recommendations aim to provide guidance for the
definition of deferrable and undeferrable interventions
during the COVID-19 pandemic for ovarian, endometrial
and cervical cancers within the context of the ESMO
Clinical Practice Guidelines
Exploratory outcome analyses according to stage and/or residual disease in the ICON7 trial of carboplatin and paclitaxel with or without bevacizumab for newly diagnosed ovarian cancer
Objective: In the randomized phase 3 ICON7 trial (ISRCTN91273375), adding bevacizumab to chemotherapy for newly diagnosed ovarian cancer significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS; primary endpoint) but not overall survival (OS; secondary endpoint) in the intent-to-treat (ITT) population. We explored treatment effect according to stage and extent of residual disease.
Methods: Patients with stage IIB-IV or high-risk (grade 3/clear-cell) stage I-IIA ovarian cancer were randomized to receive six cycles of carboplatin and paclitaxel either alone or with bevacizumab 7.5 mg/kg every 3 weeks followed by single-agent bevacizumab for 12 further cycles (total duration 12 months). Post hoc exploratory analyses of subgroups defined by stage and extent of residual disease at diagnosis within the stage IIIB-IV population (European indication) was performed.
Results: The PFS benefit from bevacizumab was seen consistently in all subgroups explored. The PFS hazard ratio was 0.77 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.59-0.99) in 411 patients with stage IIIB-IV ovarian cancer with no visible residuum and 0.81 (95% CI, 0.69-0.95) in 749 patients with stage IIIB-IV disease and visible residuum. As in the ITT population, no OS difference was detected in any subgroup except the previously described 'high-risk' subgroup. Safety results in analyzed subgroups were consistent with the overall population.
Conclusions: Adding bevacizumab to front-line chemotherapy improves PFS irrespective of stage/residual disease. In patients with stage III with >1 cm residuum, stage IV or inoperable disease, this translates into an OS benefit. No OS benefit or detriment was seen in other subgroups explored
ESMO management and treatment adapted recommendations in the COVID-19 era: gynaecological malignancies
The rapid spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus 2 infection and its related disease (COVID-19)
has required an immediate and coordinate healthcare
response to face the worldwide emergency and define
strategies to maintain the continuum of care for the
non-COVID-19 diseases while protecting patients and
healthcare providers. The dimension of the COVID-19
pandemic poses an unprecedented risk especially for the
more vulnerable populations. To manage patients with
cancer adequately, maintaining the highest quality of
care, a definition of value-based priorities is necessary
to define which interventions can be safely postponed
without affecting patients’ outcome. The European
Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) has endorsed a
tiered approach across three different levels of priority
(high, medium, low) incorporating information on the
value-based prioritisation and clinical cogency of the
interventions that can be applied for different disease
sites. Patients with gynaecological cancer are at particular
risk of COVID-19 complications because of their age and
prevalence of comorbidities. The definition of priority
level should be based on tumour stage and histology,
cancer-related symptoms or complications, aim (curative
vs palliative) and magnitude of benefit of the oncological
intervention, patients’ general condition and preferences.
The decision-making process always needs to consider
the disease-specific national and international guidelines
and the local healthcare system and social resources,
and a changing situation in relation to COVID-19 infection.
These recommendations aim to provide guidance for the
definition of deferrable and undeferrable interventions
during the COVID-19 pandemic for ovarian, endometrial
and cervical cancers within the context of the ESMO
Clinical Practice Guidelines