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A prevention strategy developed by Canadian researchers can reduce the risk
of the most common and deadly form of ovarian cancer by nearly 80%, according
to a new study published today in JAMA Network Open by
researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC).
The strategy, known as opportunistic salpingectomy (OS),
involves proactively removing a person's fallopian tubes when they are already
undergoing a routine gynecological surgery such as hysterectomy or tubal
ligation, commonly called "having one's tubes tied."
The Canadian province of British Columbia (B.C.) became the first
jurisdiction in the world to offer OS in 2010, after a team of researchers from
UBC, BC Cancer and Vancouver Coastal Health designed the approach when it was
discovered that most ovarian cancers originate in the fallopian
tubes rather than the ovaries. OS leaves a person's ovaries intact, preserving
important hormone production so there are minimal side effects from the added
procedure.
The new study, led by a B.C.-based international collaboration called the
Ovarian Cancer Observatory, provides the clearest evidence yet that the
Canadian innovation saves lives.
"This study clearly demonstrates that removing the fallopian tubes as
an add-on during routine surgery can help prevent the most lethal type of
ovarian cancer," said co-senior author Dr. Gillian Hanley, an associate
professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UBC. "It shows how this
relatively simple change in surgical practice can have a profound and
life-saving impact."
New hope against a deadly cancer
Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecological cancer. Approximately 3,100
Canadians are diagnosed with the disease each year and about 2,000 will die
from it.
There is currently no reliable screening test for ovarian cancer, meaning
that most cases are diagnosed at advanced stages when treatment options are
limited and survival rates are low.
The OS approach was initially developed and named by Dr. Dianne Miller, an
associate professor emerita at UBC and gynecologic oncologist with Vancouver
Coastal Health and BC Cancer. She co-founded B.C.'s multidisciplinary ovarian
cancer research team, OVCARE.
"If there is one thing better than curing cancer, it's never getting
the cancer in the first place," said Dr. Miller.
The new study is the first to quantify how much OS reduces the risk
of serous ovarian
cancer—the most common and deadly subtype of the disease. It builds
on previous research demonstrating that OS is safe, does not reduce the age of
menopause onset, and is cost-effective for health systems.
The study analyzed population-based health data for more than 85,000 people
who underwent gynecological surgeries in B.C. between 2008 and 2020. The
researchers compared rates of serous ovarian cancer between those who had OS
and those who had similar surgeries but did not undergo the procedure.
Overall, people who had OS were 78% less likely to develop serous ovarian
cancer. In the rare cases where ovarian cancer occurred after OS, those cancers
were found to be less biologically aggressive. The findings were validated by
data collected from pathology laboratories from around the world, which
suggested a similar effect.
From B.C. innovation to global
impact
Since its introduction in B.C. in 2010, OS has been widely adopted, with
approximately 80% of hysterectomies and tubal ligation procedures in the
province now including fallopian tube removal.
Globally, professional medical organizations in 24 countries now recommend
OS as an ovarian cancer prevention strategy, including the Society of
Obstetrics and Gynaecology of Canada, which issued guidance in 2015.
"This is the culmination of more than a decade of work that started
here in B.C.," said co-senior author Dr. David Huntsman, professor of
pathology and laboratory medicine and obstetrics and gynecology at UBC and a
distinguished scientist at BC Cancer. "The impact of OS that we report is
even greater than we expected."
The researchers say expanding global adoption of OS could prevent thousands
of ovarian cancer cases worldwide each year.
Extending OS to other abdominal and pelvic surgeries where appropriate
could further increase the number of people who could benefit from the
prevention strategy. B.C. recently became the first province to expand OS to
routine surgeries performed by general and urologic surgeons through a project
supported by the Government of B.C. and Doctors of BC.
"Our hope is that more clinicians will adopt this proven approach, which has the potential to save countless lives," said Dr. Huntsman. "Not offering this surgical add-on may leave patients unnecessarily vulnerable to this cancer."
Provided by University of British Columbia
Source: Surgical innovation may cut ovarian cancer risk by nearly 80%

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