Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
It
is important to identify women in the population who have a high risk
of ovarian cancer and who might benefit from prophylactic bilateral
salpingo-oophorectomy. The probability that a woman will develop ovarian
cancer depends on her current age, her reproductive history and her
genetic status.
METHODS:
We
simulated the distribution of ovarian cancer risk for the 2011 Ontario
female population. We generated (at random) individual risks of ovarian
cancer to age 80 for 6,301,340 women, based on the published risk
factors, mutation frequencies and population age-specific incidence
rates (SEER database). Risk factors included parity, breastfeeding, oral
contraceptives, tubal ligation and family history. Genetic factors
included 11 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and BRCA1/2
mutations.
RESULTS:
Of
the 6,301,340 women simulated as the general population of Ontario, the
(complete) model predicts that 65,805 women (1.0%) will develop ovarian
cancer by age 80. There were 46,069 women (0.7%) with a risk of ovarian
cancer above 5%. BRCA1/2 mutation carriers accounted for 67.4% of the
women at greater than 5% risk (31,028 women). Among ovarian cancer
patients at greater than 5% risk, a BRCA1/2 mutation was present in
89.2%. In contrast, SNPs contribute to a very small proportion of the
ovarian cancer patients who were at greater than 5% risk.
CONCLUSIONS:
Approximately
12.9% of all ovarian cancers in Ontario occur in the 0.7% of women in
the general population who have a lifetime ovarian cancer risk in excess
of 5%, the majority of whom carry a mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2.
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