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Systemic chemotherapy uses drugs that are injected into a vein
(IV) or given by mouth. These drugs enter the bloodstream and reach all
areas of the body, making this treatment potentially useful for cancers
that have metastasized (spread). For some cases of ovarian cancer,
chemotherapy may be injected through a catheter directly into the
abdominal cavity. This is called intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy.
Drugs given this way are also absorbed into the bloodstream, so IP
chemotherapy is also a type of systemic chemotherapy. See below for
more information.
Chemotherapy drugs kill cancer cells but also damage some
normal cells. Therefore, your doctor will be careful to avoid or
minimize side effects, which depend on the type of drugs, the amount
taken, and the length of treatment.
Temporary side effects might include nausea and vomiting, loss
of appetite, loss of hair, hand and foot rashes, and mouth sores. Some
of the drugs used in treating ovarian cancer can cause kidney and nerve
damage.
Because chemotherapy can damage the blood-producing cells of
the bone marrow, patients may have low blood cell counts. This can
result in:
- an increased chance of infection (caused by a shortage of
white blood cells)
- bleeding or bruising after minor cuts or injuries (caused
by a shortage of blood platelets)
- fatigue (caused by low red blood cell counts)
Most side effects disappear once treatment is stopped. Hair
will grow back after treatment ends, although it may look different.
There are remedies for many of the temporary side effects of
chemotherapy. For example, there are very good drugs that can be given
to prevent and treat nausea and vomiting. For more information about
chemotherapy and its side effects, please see our document, Understanding Chemotherapy: A
Guide for Patients and Families.
Side effects that may be permanent include premature menopause
and infertility (inability to become pregnant).
Rarely, some cancer treatment drugs may later cause a
life-threatening cancer of white blood cells called acute myeloid
leukemia. This is called a secondary malignancy. Your health care team
knows which drugs can cause this problem and will discuss this
possibility with you. Their positive effects against ovarian cancer
offset the small chance that any of these drugs will cause leukemia.
The typical course of chemotherapy for epithelial ovarian
cancer involves 6 cycles. A cycle is a schedule that allows regular
doses of a drug, followed by a rest period. Different drugs have
varying cycles; your oncologist (cancer doctor) will prescribe the
particular cycle or schedule for your chemotherapy.
These drugs are usually given intravenously in a 3- to 4-week
cycle. If chemotherapy treatment is chosen, you will probably receive a
combination of drugs. Most oncologists in the United States believe
that combination chemotherapy is more effective in treating ovarian
cancer than one drug alone.
Combination therapy using a platinum compound, such as
cisplatin or carboplatin, and a taxane, such as paclitaxel (Taxol®)
or docetaxel (Taxotere®), is the
standard approach. For IV
chemotherapy, most doctors favor carboplatin over cisplatin because it
has fewer side effects and is just as effective.
In
intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy the chemotherapy drugs
are injected into the abdominal cavity through a thin tube or catheter.
The tube can be placed during the staging/debulking surgery, but
sometimes it is placed later, after surgery. If it is done after
surgery, many doctors place it using laparoscopy. The catheter is
usually connected to a "port," which is placed under the skin against a
bony structure of the abdominal wall, such as a rib or pelvic bone. A
port is a half dollar-sized disk topped with a pliable diaphragm. A
needle can be placed through the skin and the diaphragm to give
medicines like chemotherapy. Over time, there can be problems with the
catheter. -- it may become plugged or infected or even damage the
bowel.
Giving chemotherapy this way has the advantage of giving the
most concentrated dose of the drugs to the cancer cells in the
abdominal lining. The chemotherapy drugs given this way also get
absorbed into the bloodstream and reach cancer cells outside of the
abdominal cavity. IP chemotherapy works well, but the side effects can
be more severe than with regular chemotherapy. In a study of women with
advanced ovarian cancer, women getting the IP chemotherapy had more
abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and other side effects than the women
getting chemotherapy through the vein. These side effects actually made
some women stop their treatment early. Still, the women getting
intraperitoneal chemotherapy lived longer than the women getting
regular chemotherapy. IP chemotherapy is currently only given to some
of the women with advanced cancer.
Although epithelial ovarian cancer tends to respond to
chemotherapy, the cancer cells may eventually begin to grow again.
Tumor recurrence can be treated with additional cycles of the same
chemotherapy used the first time. In some cases, different drugs are
used. Some of these are topotecan, anthracyclines such as doxorubicin
(Adriamycin) and liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil), gemcitabine,
cyclophosphamide, vinorelbine (Navelbine), hexamethylmelamine,
ifosfamide, and etoposide.
Different drug combinations are often used to treat germ cell
tumors and are described in the section on treatment of germ cell
tumors.
Last Medical Review: 08/27/2009 Last Revised: 08/27/2009
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