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Ovarian Cancer Prevention and Screening Nicole D. Fleming, MD Assistant Professor Department of Gynecologic Oncology MD Anderson Cancer Center MD Anderson Regional Care Centers Sugar Land, Texas Objectives • Review symptoms and risk factors for ovarian cancer • Define high risk populations – HBOC – Lynch (HNPCC) • Screening in the general population • Cancer risk reduction strategies in high risk patients Gynecologic Cancers in 2013 • Uterine Cancer – 49,560 new cases 8,190 deaths • Ovarian Cancer – 22,240 new cases 14,030 deaths • Cervical Cancer – 12,340 new cases 4,030 deaths Cancer Facts & Figures 2013, ACS Ovarian Cancer Marcheline Bertrand Gilda Radner • Most common cause of death among women with gynecologic malignancies • Mean age at diagnosis: 60 yrs • 70% of cases have advanced disease at time of diagnosis • Symptoms can be vague – – – – Bloating Early satiety Abdominal discomfort Unintentional weight loss Ovarian Cancer Risk Factors • Increase Risk – Family history • BRCA 1/2 • HBOC • Lynch – Nulliparity – Infertility • Decrease Risk – – – – Multiparity Oral contraceptive pills Breast feeding Tubal ligation **Infertility medications have not been shown to increase risk of cancer Strategies for Ovarian Cancer Risk Reduction • Quantify lifetime risk – General population (1.7%) – High risk population • BRCA (15-50%) • Lynch (12%) • • • Screening Chemoprevention Risk reducing surgery – – Recommended for BRCA 1/2 mutation carriers or those with Lynch syndrome Bilateral salpingoophorectomy +/- hysterectomy by age 40 or when childbearing completed Ovarian Cancer Screening • Minimal requirements for a screening test – High sensitivity ≥ 75% – High specificity ≥ 99% – Positive predictive value at least 10% • PPV depends on disease incidence Challenges to Screening for OC • Age specific incidence • Anatomy • Biology Age Specific Incidence is Low • Premenopausal women – • 1 in 10,000 Postmenopausal women – 1 in 2,500 Anatomic Barriers to Screening • Need a diagnostic test to follow a positive screening test – Pap or Mammogram abnormal • Diagnostic test=BIOPSY – Ovarian cancer screen positive • Diagnostic test=SURGERY Biologic Barriers to Screening • • • • Natural history is not completely understood No premalignant lesion No real animal models to study natural history Very heterogenous disease “Ovarian Cancer Screening Tests” • Ovacheck (2004 Correlogic) – Mass spec to identify ovarian cancer protein signature – Sensitivity 100%, Specificity 95%, PPV 94% – Not reproducible • Ovasure (2008 Labcorp) – 6 marker panel – Sensitivity 95%, Specificity 99%, PPV 99.3% – Used incorrect incidence to calculate PPV (6.5%) Is CA125 an Effective Screening Test? • Elevated in only 50% of stage I ovarian cancers • Many other common conditions cause false elevations – – – – – – Fibroids Endometriosis Heavy menses Post-abdominal surgery Liver disease False elevations common in premenopausal women PLCO Screening Trial • Randomized trial of screening versus observation • 78,216 women age 55-74 years • Screening arm - annual CA125 and pelvic US • Results were sent to primary doctor for management • Main outcome was ovarian cancer mortality • Secondary outcomes were incidence of OC and complications from screening • Follow up time 13 years Buys SS et al. JAMA 2011 PLCO Results • No difference in OC incidence in both groups – Screening 212 and controls 176 (RR 1.21, CI 0.99-1.48) • No difference in OC deaths – Screening 118 and controls 100 (RR 1.18, CI 0.82-1.71) • False positives, n=3285 – 1080 underwent surgery – 163 (15%) > 1 major complication • No difference in non-cancer associated death rates Buys SS et al. JAMA 2011 PLCO Conclusions • Screening with simultaneous CA125 and US did NOT decrease ovarian cancer mortality • False positives lead to an increase in complications compared to usual follow up Buys SS et al. JAMA 2011 U.S. ROCA study • Single arm, prospective screening study • Women age 50-74, no family history of cancer • Computer algorithm to evaluate change in CA125 over time and age • ROCA risk score – Normal risk—Repeat CA125 in one year – Intermediate risk (5.8%)—Repeat CA125 in 3 months – High risk (0.9%)– TVUS and refer to Gyn Onc Lu KH et al. Cancer 2013 U.S. ROCA study • Total 4051 participants over 11 years study period (2001-2011) • 117 (2.9%) underwent US and referral • 10 underwent surgery – 3 benign ovarian tumors – 2 borderline tumors – 4 invasive OC (stage IA, 2 stage IC, stage IIB) – 1 endometrial cancer (stage IB) • PPV 40% (95% CI=12.2%, 73.8%) • Specificity 99.9% (95% CI=99.7%, 100%) Lu KH et al. Cancer 2013 UKCTOCS Trial • 3-arm, randomized controlled trial (2:1:1) • Postmenopausal women, age 50-74 202,628 enrolled No treatment N=101,359 Annual CA125 using ROMA w/TVUS if high risk (MMS) N=50,640 Annual screening with TVUS (USS) N=50,639 Menon U et al. Lancet Oncol 2009 UKCTOCS Trial UKCTOCS MMS USS U.S. ROCA Sensitivity 89.5% 75.0% Specificity 99.8% 98.2% Specificity 99.9% PPV 35.1% 2.8% PPV 40% 1. Menon U et al. Lancet Oncol 2009 2. Lu KH et al. Cancer 2013 ROCA and UKCTOCS Trials • Majority of women returned for annual CA125 • Average “normal risk” ROCA was 91-93% • Less than 1% referred for TVUS and gynecologic oncology consultation • Appears to be a cost effective screening method in postmenopausal population Screening in the General Population • CA125 alone or annually with TVUS does not decrease OC mortality • ROCA with referral for TVUS and Gyn Onc was feasible • Awaiting results from large UKCTOCS study designed to address sensitivity and mortality from OC (likely in 2015) • Screening in general population currently NOT recommended unless done as part of a clinical trial Screening in High Risk Population LAB 06-0596 • Prospective database of women at increased risk for ovarian or primary peritoneal cancer • Eligibility criteria: – 1. Personal history of breast cancer. – 2. Family history of breast and/or ovarian cancer (one or more relatives). – 3. Carrier of a mutation in the BRCA1 or BRCA 2 gene, or the presence of one of these mutations in a family member. – 4. Personal history of colon or endometrial cancer. – 5. Family history of colon or endometrial cancer (one or more relatives). – 6. Carrier of a mutation in the MLH1, MSH2, or MSH6 gene, or the presence of one of these mutations in a family member. • Screening every 6-12 months – – Transvaginal US Serum CA125 level PI: Dr. Karen Lu Ovarian Cancer Risk Stratification in Patients with an Adnexal Mass • OVA1 (Vermillion) – Multivariate biomarker assay – CA125, transferrin, transthyretin, apolipoprotein A1, beta-2 microglobulin – Use in patients WITH an adnexal mass to determine need for referral to a gynecologic oncologist – Sensitivity 96%, Specificity 51% Good test to rule OUT cancer – PPV 31%, NPV 98% **OVA1 has NOT been approved for use as an ovarian cancer screening tool, nor has it been proven to result in early detection or reduce the risk of death from ovarian cancer. Bristow et al. Gynecol Oncol 2013 Conclusions • Identifying women at increased risk for ovarian cancer is necessary for successful screening • Effective screening tests for the general population are still needed • Several options for cancer risk reduction in high risk women (screening, chemoprevention, surgery)