abstract
Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndrome carries significant
mortality for young women if effective preventive and screening
measures are not taken. Preventive
salpingo-oophorectomy is currently the only method known to reduce the
risk of ovarian
cancer-related death. Histopathological analyses of
these surgical specimens indicate that a high proportion of ovarian
cancers
in women at high risk and in the general population
arise from the fallopian tube. This paradigm shift concerning the cell
of origin for the most common subtype of ovarian
cancer, high-grade serous carcinoma, has sparked a major effort within
the
research community to develop new and robust model
systems to study the fallopian tube epithelium as the cell of origin of
“ovarian” cancer. In this review, evidence
supporting the fallopian tube as the origin of ovarian cancer is
presented as are
novel experimental model systems for studying the
fallopian tube epithelium in high-risk women as well as in the general
population.
This review also addresses the clinical
implications of the newly proposed cell of origin, the clinical
questions that arise,
and novel strategies for ovarian cancer prevention.
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