Role of Reactive Thrombocytosis After Primary Cytoreductive Surgery in Advanced Ovarian Cancer
Abstract We investigated the incidence of reactive thrombocytosis after maximal cytoreductive surgery in advanced epithelial ovarian cancer and its role on survival. We retrospectively reviewed electronic medical records of patients who underwent primary cytoreductive surgery for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer from January 1, 2012, and December 31, 2017. We analyzed the correlation serum platelet counts and prognosis at various time points including before surgery, during peri-operative period, and on each cycle of adjuvant chemotherapy.474 patients were eligible for the analysis. 401 patients (84.6%) were FIGO stage III and 405 patients (85.4%) were serous adenocarcinoma. 79 patients (22.6%) had splenectomy and optimal cytoreduction was achieved at 326 patients (68.8%). A week after surgery, thrombocytosis was observed in 229 patients (48.3%) patients in the entire cohort. Especially, higher platelet counts were observed in patients with splenectomy compared with patients without splenectomy. In particular, thrombocytosis on 5th cycle of adjuvant chemotherapy showed most significant impact on overall survival in multivariate analysis. In a logistic regression model, splenectomy significantly attributed to thrombocytosis on 5th cycle.Reactive thrombocytosis after primary cytoreductive surgery is associated with poor survival in advanced epithelial ovarian cancer, particularly when thrombocytosis was observed during adjuvant chemotherapy.