Leukemia Following Chemotherapy for Ovarian Cancer

John Kaldor(National Cancer Centre Japan), Nicholas Day(National Cancer Centre Japan), Folke Pettersson(National Cancer Centre Japan), E. Aileen Clarke(National Cancer Centre Japan), Dorthe Pedersen(National Cancer Centre Japan), W H Mehnert(National Cancer Centre Japan), Janine Bell(National Cancer Centre Japan), Herman Høst(National Cancer Centre Japan), Patricia Prior(National Cancer Centre Japan), Sakari Karjalainen(National Cancer Centre Japan), F. E. Neal(National Cancer Centre Japan), Maria Koch(National Cancer Centre Japan), Pierre R. Band(National Cancer Centre Japan), Won Choi(National Cancer Centre Japan), Vera Pompe Kirn(National Cancer Centre Japan), Annie Arslan(National Cancer Centre Japan), Birgitta Zarén(National Cancer Centre Japan), Andrew R. Belch(National Cancer Centre Japan), Hans H. Storm(National Cancer Centre Japan), B Kittelmann(National Cancer Centre Japan), P. M. Fraser(National Cancer Centre Japan), Marilyn Stovall(National Cancer Centre Japan)
New England Journal of Medicine
January 4, 1990
Cited by 281Open Access
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Abstract

An international collaborative group of cancer registries and hospitals identified 114 cases of leukemia following ovarian cancer. We investigated the possible etiologic role of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and other factors, using a case-control study design, with three controls matched to each case of leukemia. Chemotherapy alone was associated with a relative risk of 12 (95 percent confidence interval, 4.4 to 32), as compared with surgery alone, and patients treated with both chemotherapy and radiotherapy had a relative risk of 10 (95 percent confidence interval, 3.4 to 28). Radiotherapy alone did not produce a significant increase in risk as compared with surgery alone. The risk of leukemia was greatest four or five years after chemotherapy began, and the risk was elevated for at least eight years after the cessation of chemotherapy. The drugs cyclophosphamide, chlorambucil, melphalan, thiotepa, and treosulfan were independently associated with significantly increased risks of leukemia, as was the combination of doxorubicin hydrochloride and cisplatin. Chlorambucil and melphalan were the most leukemogenic drugs, followed by thiotepa; cyclophosphamide and treosulfan were the weakest leukemogens, and the effect per gram was substantially lower at high doses than at lower doses. The extent to which the relative risks of leukemia are offset by differences in chemotherapeutic effectiveness is not known.


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