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Declining Second Primary Ovarian Cancer After First Primary Breast Cancer
Abstract
Purpose Although
ovarian cancer incidence rates have declined in the United States, less
is known of ovarian cancer trends among
survivors of breast cancer. Therefore, we
examined second primary ovarian cancers after first primary breast
cancer.
Methods Data were
obtained from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program
(1973 to 2008). Standardized incidence ratios
(SIRs) were calculated as the observed numbers
of ovarian cancers among survivors of breast cancer compared with the
expected
numbers in the general population. Absolute
rates were measured as the incidence rates for second primary ovarian
cancer by
year of diagnosis of the first primary breast
cancer adjusted for age of breast cancer diagnosis and years since
diagnosis.
Results SIRs for
second primary ovarian cancer were elevated over the entire study period
(SIR, 1.24; 95% CI, 1.2 to 1.3), whereas
the absolute rates declined with an estimated
annual percentage change near 1% (−1.34% to −0.09% per year). Secular
trends
for second ovarian cancers were similar after
estrogen receptor (ER) –positive and ER-negative breast cancers, whereas
the
age-specific patterns varied significantly by ER
expression (P for interaction < .001). The largest SIR was among women age less than 50 years with ER-negative breast cancer (SIR, 4.35;
95% CI, 3.5 to 5.4).
Conclusion
Persistently elevated SIRs along with decreasing absolute rates over the
entire study period suggest that ovarian cancers
in both the general population and survivors of
breast cancer are declining in parallel, possibly because of common risk
factor
exposures. Analytic studies are needed to
further assess the parallel overall trends and the age-specific
interaction by ER
expression.
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