Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
The
objective of this study was to evaluate the association between
microsatellite instability (MSI) status and (1) ovarian cancer risk
factors and (2) the distribution of the specific histologic subtypes in a
population-based sample of epithelial ovarian cancers.
METHODS:
Participants
were drawn from 3 population-based studies of primary epithelial
ovarian cancer. Tumor DNA was analyzed using 5 standardized
microsatellite markers to assess MSI status. Patients were divided into 3
groups (MSI-high, MSI-low, and MSI-stable) according to National Cancer
Institute criteria. We compared the prevalence of specific known risk
and protective factors among the 3 subgroups, including body mass index,
smoking history, parity, BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation status, past oral
contraceptive use, and tubal ligation. Similarly, we compared the
distribution of the histologic subtypes among the 3 subgroups.
RESULTS:
A
total of 917 ovarian cancer patients were included. One hundred
twenty-seven (13.8%) cancers were MSI-high. Subgroup analyses according
to smoking, body mass index, parity, past oral contraceptive use, and
past tubal ligation did not reveal any statistically significant
differences among the groups. Among the 29 patients with BRCA1
mutations, 20.7% had MSI-high cancers compared with 5.9% among 17
BRCA2-mutation patients. The proportions of different ovarian cancer
histologic findings among the various MSI subgroups were similar.
CONCLUSIONS:
The
prevalence of risk and protective factors among ovarian cancer patients
is similar for cancers with and without MSI. The distributions of MSI
do not differ significantly among ovarian cancers with different
histologic findings. Ovarian cancer patients with BRCA1 mutations had a
21% rate of MSI-high tumors, compared with 6% among patients with BRCA2
mutations, but this difference was not statistically significant.
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