A new type of intensive chemotherapy is proving highly effective in
treating women desperately ill with Ovarian Cancer, scientists announced
today.
The pioneering treatment is successful in 80% of patients
whose first-line chemotherapy had failed, compared to rates of less than
15% under current therapies.
The results, published in the
British Journal of Cancer today, will provide fresh hope to the 7,000
women who are diagnosed with ovarian cancer each year in the UK. They
have a survival rate of just 29% after five years.
Currently,
women whose tumors have returned have very limited options, with less
than half responding to follow-up chemotherapy.
The Dutch study
involved 98 women with Ovarian Cancer whose first-line chemotherapy had
initially been successful, but who had later relapsed.
Researchers
divided the women into three groups depending on the severity of their
cancer and treated them with an intensive regime of Cisplatin and
another drug called Etoposide.
The response rates of the two groups of women who were least ill to the new treatment were 92% and 91%.
This compares to a response of 50% and 20% to 30% with standard therapies.
Among
the group of women who were most seriously ill, 46% responded to
treatment, compared with less than 15% for current therapies.
Overall,
80% of the women's tumours shrank and an unprecedented 43% showed a
complete response, with all signs of their cancers disappearing.
Cisplatin
and Etoposide are already used in chemotherapy regimes for many
cancers, but the new treatment used the drugs much more intensively than
usual.
Usually, doctors give their patients several weeks to
recover from the toxic side-effects of Cisplatin, but in the new study
the drug was given on a weekly basis, along with strong drugs to prevent
nausea.
Study author Dr Ronald de Wit, of the Rotterdam Cancer
Institute, said: "We were delighted by the success of the study. The new
drug combination was highly effective at keeping women alive for
longer, giving real hope to those who would otherwise have had very
little at all."
This site is for information on the various Chemo treatments and Stem Cell Therapies since 1992. This journey became bitter sweet in 2014, with the passing of my beautiful and dear wife. Sherry, had fought Non - Hodgkins Lymphoma(NHL) since 1990, in and out of remissions time and time again. From T-Cell therapies(1990's) to Dual Cord Blood Transplant(2014), she was in Clinical Trials over the years. This site is for informational purpose only and is not to promote the use of certain therapies.
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