Publications (2)3.72 Total impact
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Article: Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in ovarian cancer: first report of the HYPER-O registry.
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ABSTRACT: An analysis of experience of surgical and gynecologic oncologists in the United States with the use of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy for women with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). An Internet-based registry (HYPER-O) collected data from collaborating institutions. Eligibility included women with EOC treated with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy. Borderline and nonepithelial cancers were excluded. As of July 1, 2008, 141 women were eligible for analysis treated at the following time points: frontline (n = 26), interval debulking (n = 19), consolidation (n = 12), and recurrence (n = 83). The mean perfusion temperatures were 38.5 to 43.6 degrees C (median, 41.9 degrees C) for inflow and 36.9 to 42.9 degrees C (median, 41 degrees C) for outflow for 30 to 120 minutes. Treatment was with a platinum agent (n = 72), mitomycin (n = 53), or a combination (n = 14). Median follow-up was 18 months (range, 0.3-140.5 months) and median overall survival 30.3 months (95% confidence interval, 23.0-37.6) with 2-, 5-, and 10-year overall survival probabilities of 49.1%, 25.4%, and 14.3%, respectively. Of the 141 patients, 110 (78%) experienced recurrence of ovarian cancer and 87 died, 3 (0.5%) dying within 30 days of surgery. In the multivariable analysis, the factors significant for increased survival were sensitivity to platinum response (P = 0.048), completeness of cytoreduction scores of 1 or 0 (P = 0.025), carboplatin alone or a combination of 2 or more chemotherapy agents used (P = 0.011), and duration of hospital stays of 10 days or less (P = 0.021). Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy is a viable additional treatment option for patients with invasive EOC and may extend life in selected groups. It warrants further study in randomized controlled trials.International Journal of Gynecological Cancer 01/2010; 20(1):61-9. · 1.65 Impact Factor -
Article: Glomus tumor of the ovary masquerading as granulosa cell tumor: case report.
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ABSTRACT: A solid right adnexal mass in a 73-year-old woman bled profusely with mobilization mimicking a granulosa cell tumor. There was almost complete replacement of the ovary by a circumscribed, 4.0 cm tumor with a hemorrhagic, solid cut surface. Morphologic and phenotypic correlation supported a diagnosis of glomus tumor. Large gaping vessels and small sinusoidal-type vessels formed an anastomotic vascular network with an inner endothelial lining (CD31+/CD34+) and an outer layer of glomocytes (actin+/desmin-/inhibin-). The hemangiopericytoma-like vasculature accounted for bleeding during surgery.International journal of gynecological pathology: official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Pathologists 11/2009; 29(1):24-6. · 2.07 Impact Factor