OVARIAN CANCER and US

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Family physician preferences and knowledge gaps regarding the care of adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer



Abstract


CONCLUSIONS:

Most family physicians are willing to care for childhood cancer survivors in consultation with a cancer center, and with specific tools to facilitate this care.

IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS:

Adult and adolescent survivors of childhood cancer who receive their follow-up care from a family physician must be empowered to choose a physician who is comfortable with caring for survivors. Further, the survivor must ensure that their physician has access to a treatment summary as well as to patient-specific recommendations for surveillance for late effects of cancer therapy.

Are too many imaging tests being performed in women with an adnexal mass?



Abstract

Objective:
To evaluate the patterns of radiologic imaging requested by family physicians and gynaecologists in the work-up of women found to have an adnexal mass on pelvic ultrasound, and to evaluate whether advanced imaging tests are associated with more appropriate referral of women with a high-risk adnexal mass to gynaecologic oncologists.

Methods:
Centralized provincial databases of health care usage were used to identify women aged 45 and older who had a pelvic ultrasound examination between 2006 and 2008. Subsequent imaging tests ordered were identified according to physician specialty. For women who proceeded to laparotomy, logistic regression was performed to determine which imaging tests enabled primary physicians to make appropriate referrals of women with high risk adnexal tumours to a gynaecologic oncologist.

Results:
We identified 193 261 women aged 45 and older who had a pelvic ultrasound. Of these, 19 949 (10.3%) had a subsequent laparotomy; 2223 women were categorized as having a benign adnexal mass, 627 were categorized as having a malignant adnexal mass, and the remainder had another diagnosis such as uterine fibroid. Up to 12% of women had a pelvic MRI, and 58% of women had a CT scan after a pelvic ultrasound. Family physicians referred 95% of women with a high-risk ovarian mass to a gynaecologic surgeon rather than to a gynaecologic oncologist, and gynaecologists referred 47% of such women to a gynaecologic oncologist after imaging. Gynaecologic oncologists operated on 55% of women with a malignant adnexal mass. On multivariate analysis, a preoperative CT scan (OR 3.58; P < 0.001) and a CT scan and MRI (OR 7.78; P < 0.001) were associated with surgery performed by a gynaecologic oncologist, but a preoperative MRI alone was not significantly associated (OR 1.86; P = 0.09). After ultrasound alone the mean time to surgery was 100 days; this increased significantly when further imaging tests were performed (with additional CT to 131 days, with MRI to 170 days, and with CT and MRI to 179 days; P = 0.002).

Conclusion: 
Performing a pelvic MRI after a pelvic ultrasound does not increase the rate of referral of women with a high-risk adnexal mass to a gynaecologic oncologist. A consensus on appropriate imaging and triage is needed when an adnexal mass is identified on ultrasound.

Preoperative clinical and radiological features of metastatic ovarian tumors



Abstract

PURPOSE:
To investigate the clinical characteristics and pre-operative imaging features of non-genital metastatic ovarian tumors.

METHODS:

A retrospective case series study that compared 18 patients with histologically confirmed non-genital metastatic ovarian tumors (the study group) with 25 patients who were diagnosed with a primary ovarian cancer (control group).

CONCLUSION:

Pre-operative sonography findings, CA-125 levels and RMI 2 scores can be highly accurate in differentiating between primary and metastatic ovarian tumor

SGO - annual meeting information 2013



SGO

Abdominal 'Chemo Bath' May Extend Survival in Ovarian Cancer Patients - US News and World Report



media

open access: Depth of colorectal-wall invasion and lymph-node involvement as major outcome factors influencing surgical strategy in patients with advanced and recurrent ovarian cancer with diffuse peritoneal metastases



WJSO 

Conclusions
Our findings suggest that the major independent prognostic factors in patients with advanced ovarian cancer needing colorectal resections are completeness of cytoreduction and depth of bowel wall invasion. Surgical management and pathological assessment should be aware of and deal with dual locoregional and mesenteric lymphatic spread.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

The Foundation for Women’s Cancer Announces 2013 Recipient of the Claudia Cohen Research Foundation Prize for Outstanding Gynecologic Cancer Researcher



press release

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) March 09, 2013 

The Foundation for Women’s Cancer and the Claudia Cohen Research Foundation announce today that Dr. Robert C. Bast, Jr. has been selected as the 2013 recipient of the Foundation for Women’s Cancer/Claudia Cohen Research Foundation Prize for Outstanding Gynecologic Researcher. The $50,000 prize is being presented at the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists 44th Annual Meeting on Women's Cancer in Los Angeles.....

Removal of the Ovaries/Fallopian Tubes and CA-125 Screening to Reduce the Risk of Ovarian Cancer



BRCA1 expression and improved survival



Abstract

Personal Genome Project: Nature and Nurture, Warts and All



Personal Genome Project: Nature and Nurture, Warts and All

Saturday, March 09, 2013

Recording of family history is associated with colorectal cancer stage



Recording of family history is associated with colorectal cancer stage.:
Related Articles

CONCLUSION: A FH of CRC and other Lynch-related cancers was not recorded in ∼40% of young CRC patients and recording improved only slightly over the years. As a first step in the identification of Lynch-related cancer families, physicians should be trained to record a detailed FH in the work-up of all newly diagnosed CRC patients.

PMID: 23470269 [PubMed - in process]

LPA Stimulates the Phosphorylation of p130Cas via Gαi2 in Ovarian Cancer Cells



Blogger's Note: LPA has been investigated in ovarian cancer as an early detection test (failed) for over a decade+; this is continuing research

LPA Stimulates the Phosphorylation of p130Cas via Gαi2 in Ovarian Cancer Cells

Farletuzumab (a monoclonal antibody against folate receptor alpha) in relapsed platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer (MORAb-003)



ScienceDirect.com - Gynecologic Oncology - Farletuzumab (a monoclonal antibody against folate receptor alpha) in relapsed platinum-sensitive ovarian cancer

Highlights

► Complete or partial ORR was 75% with combination therapy.
► Response rate among subjects with first progression-free interval < 12 months (75%) was comparable to subjects with progression-free interval ≥ 12 (84%).
► In 21% of evaluable subjects, second progression-free interval was longer than first progression-free interval.

A clinical experience of single agent Bevacizumab in relapsing ovarian cancer



ScienceDirect.com - Gynecologic Oncology - A clinical experience of single agent Bevacizumab in relapsing ovarian cancer

Highlights

► The median time to progression in women with heavily treated recurrent ovarian carcinoma treated with bevacizumab was 4 months.
► The most frequent adverse effect was arterial hypertension (62% of patients) and no intestinal perforation was reported.
► The PFS was marginally improved in patients who experienced severe arterial hypertension during the first month of therapy.

open access: Longitudinal health-related quality of life assessment: implications for prognosis in ovarian cancer



Journal of Ovarian Research | Abstract | Longitudinal health-related quality of life assessment: implications for prognosis in ovarian cancer

Abstract:

Background

There is no information in the literature on the impact of changes in quality of life (QoL) scores on prognosis in ovarian cancer. We investigated whether changes in QoL during treatment could predict survival in ovarian cancer patients.....

open access - full pdf version

Scientists uncover source of ovarian stem-like cells prone to give rise to ovarian cancer



Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory | Scientists uncover source of ovarian stem-like cells prone to give rise to ovarian cancer

Oophorectomy for Benign Causes: No Survival Benefit



Oophorectomy for Benign Causes: No Survival Benefit

"....The researchers conclude that oophorectomy was not associated with increased survival at any age. However, they note, "At the time of hysterectomy, women with known high-penetrance susceptibility genes for ovarian and breast cancer (BRCA, Lynch) should strongly consider oophorectomy because the lifetime risk of ovarian cancer is high. In contrast, approximately 300,000 U.S. women without these mutations, and many more worldwide, have bilateral oophorectomy at the time of hysterectomy for benign disease every year," they add. "Consequently, the association of oophorectomy with increased mortality in the overall population has substantial public health implications." "

Caring for your skin, nails and hair during and after cancer treatment | Oncolink



Caring for your skin, nails and hair during and after cancer treatment | Oncolink

Part I: Panel Discussion

Part II: Make-Up Application and Wig Tips

 

Diagnostic accuracy of Risk of Malignancy Index in predicting complete tumor removal at primary debulking surgery for ovarian cancer patients



Diagnostic accuracy of Risk of Malignancy Index in predicting complete tumor removal at primary debulking surgery for ovarian cancer patients - Fagö-Olsen - Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica - Wiley Online Library

Abstract

Ovarian cancer patients, in whom complete tumor removal is impossible with primary debulking surgery (PDS) may benefit from neoadjuvant chemotherapy and interval debulking surgery. However, the task of performing a pre-operative evaluation about the feasibility of PDS is difficult. We aimed to investigate if risk of malignancy index (RMI) was a useful marker for this evaluation. RMI and surgical outcome were investigated in 164 patients, of whom 49 had no residual tumor after PDS. Receiver operating characteristic showed an area under the curve of 0.72 (confidence interval: 0.64–0.80). The possibility of complete tumor removal decreased with increasing RMI and there was a tendency towards higher RMI in patients with residual tumor after PDS, but no single cut-off value of RMI produced useful clinical predictive values. In conclusion, RMI alone is not an optimal method to determine if complete tumor removal is possible with PDS.

Carestream MyVue Patient Portal Now Available as a Cloud Service (Italy)



Carestream MyVue Patient Portal Now Available as a Cloud Service

"Carestream's MyVue patient portal will be available as a cloud service in March 2013. MyVue empowers patients to securely access, manage and share their medical images and radiology reports with healthcare providers.
Deploying the portal as a Vue Cloud Service offers the flexibility of a monthly fee and can accommodate more users without additional network expansions. Carestream manages remote access, networking requirements and security procedures for users of its cloud services, while also addressing regulatory compliance and service uptime.....

(interactive map) Overall Ranking, 2009 - State Health System Ranking - The Commonwealth Fund



Overall Ranking, 2009 - State Health System Ranking - Health Systems Data Center - The Commonwealth Fund

".... Search by zip code or location name, or browse the tablet-accessible U.S. maps, to see regional pages with detailed performance and ranking data on measures of access to care, prevention and treatment, avoidable hospital use and costs, and measures associated with living a healthy life. Or compare the performance of states and communities and export custom bar charts and tables.....

open access: Calorie restriction and cancer prevention: a mechanistic perspective



open access:

Richard Sullivan: Why are we doing this? - Cover Story - Cancer World



Richard Sullivan: Why are we doing this? - Cover Story - Cancer World

Friday, March 08, 2013

2013 Cochrane Review: Laparoscopy versus laparotomy for FIGO stage I ovarian cancer including plain language summary



Laparoscopy versus laparotomy for FIGO stage I ovarian cancer - The Cochrane Library

Abstract (repost)

BACKGROUND:

This is an updated version of the original review that was first published in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 4. Laparoscopy has become an increasingly common approach to surgical staging of apparent early-stage ovarian tumours. This review was undertaken to assess the available evidence on the benefits and risks of laparoscopy compared with laparotomy for the management of International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage I ovarian cancer.

OBJECTIVES:

To evaluate the benefits and risks of laparoscopy compared with laparotomy for the surgical treatment of FIGO stage I ovarian cancer (stages Ia, Ib and Ic).

SEARCH METHODS:

For the original review, we searched the Cochrane Gynaecological Cancer Group Trials (CGCRG) Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2007, Issue 2), MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS, Biological Abstracts and CancerLit from 1 January 1990 to 30 November 2007. We also handsearched relevant journals, reference lists of identified studies and conference abstracts. For this updated review, we extended the CGCRG Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, EMBASE and LILACS searches to 6 December 2011.

SELECTION CRITERIA:

Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), quasi-RCTs and prospective case-control studies comparing laparoscopic staging with open surgery (laparotomy) in women with stage I ovarian cancer according to FIGO.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS:

There were no studies to include, therefore we tabulated data from non-randomised studies (NRS) for discussion.

MAIN RESULTS:

We performed no meta-analyses.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS:

This review has found no good-quality evidence to help quantify the risks and benefits of laparoscopy for the management of early-stage ovarian cancer as routine clinical practice.

 


Wednesday, March 06, 2013

Impact of intraoperative rupture of the ovarian capsule on prognosis in patients with early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer: A meta-analysis



Abstract




Abstract

Background

The impact of intraoperative rupture on prognosis is controversial in early-stage epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). Thus, we performed a meta-analysis to determine its impact and to evaluate factors to increase its risk.

Methods

We searched PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library till May 2011, and 9 eligible studies including 2382 patients were evaluated. All patients were classified into three groups: no rupture; intraoperative rupture; preoperative involvement.

Results

Preoperative involvement decreased progression-free survival when compared with intraoperative rupture (PFS; HR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.01–2.14), which also showed poorer PFS than no rupture (HR, 2.41; 95% CI, 1.74–3.33). Although preoperative involvement reduced PFS when compared with intraoperative rupture (HR, 2.63; 95% CI, 1.11–6.20), there was no difference in it between intraoperative rupture and no rupture in patients who underwent complete surgical staging operation and adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy if needed (HR, 1.49; 95% CI, 0.45–4.95). Furthermore, adhesion to adjacent tissues, grade 2 or 3 disease were more common (ORs, 2.01 and 2.47; 95% CIs, 1.20–3.37 and 1.12–5.46), whereas mucinous tumor was less frequent (OR, 0.51; 95% CI, 0.37–0.72) in intraoperative rupture than in no rupture.

Conclusions

Intraoperative rupture may not decrease PFS when compared with no rupture in patients with early-stage EOC who underwent complete surgical staging operation and adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy. Furthermore, more adhesion to adjacent tissues and grade 2 or 3 disease, and less mucinous tumor are expected to increase the risk of intraoperative rupture.