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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Letter: “Women with double primary cancers of the colorectum and endometrium: do they have Lynch syndrome?”



Letter to the editor (full access requires $$)

 We read with interest the report from Song et al. [1] who evaluated 15 women identified at a single institute with double primary cancers of the colorectum and endometrium. They report that 66% of the women in this cohort met the criteria for suspected Lynch Syndrome (LS, based on tumour molecular features of mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency) and/or clinically-defined LS (based on family history). Clinically-defined LS was described as “revised Amsterdam criteria”, but also as “family history of at least one first-degree relative with a Lynch syndrome-related cancer” [1] – which does not capture all features of the Amsterdam II criteria [2].

MDcme.ca Course Information Ovarian Cancer



MDcme


Learning objectives
After completing this module, you will be able to:
  • Describe the role of family history in ovarian cancer;
  • Discuss the limitations of current screening options including CA 125 and transvaginal ultrasound in early detection of ovarian cancer;
  • Explain the limitations of screening for ovarian cancer;
  • Review how to make appropriate referrals for specialty care;
  • Identify the importance of incorporating a discussion for ovarian cancer into a yearly well woman visit;
  • Describe the symptoms which are suspicious of ovarian cancer;
  • List the appropriate diagnostic tests to use for ovarian cancer;
  • Demonstrate enhanced sensitivity to the psycho-social aspects of ovarian cancer;
  • Identify appropriate community help and support; and
  • Describe how to counsel patients on treatments and options.

Science in 2016: Separating the hype from the promise



Science in 2016

Increased sensitivity to platinum drugs of cancer cells with acquired resistance to trabectedin



Abstract

Conclusions:
Our finding that resistance to trabectedin is associated with the loss of NER function, with a consequent increased sensitivity to platinum drugs, provides the rational for sequential use of these drugs in patients who have acquired resistance to trabectedin.

Risk prediction tools for cancer in primary care



open access
 

What types of risk prediction models exist?

Although there is some overlap, the two main types of risk prediction model for cancer in primary care are as follows:
  1. To predict the risk of prevalent but undiagnosed disease in those with symptoms.
  2. To predict the risk of future incident disease in asymptomatic individuals.
 Models that predict the risk of current cancer in individuals with symptoms are principally designed to guide further investigation and referral. Many have been developed for a range of cancers; in the United Kingdom the best known are the risk assessment tools (RATs) developed from case–control studies in primary care......

Survivor Advocate Program 2016 Survivorship - Biennial Cancer Conference



ACS

Survivor Advocate Program

The Survivor Advocate Program provides travel scholarships for up to 20 advocates to attend the 8th Biennial Cancer Survivorship Research Conference: Innovation in a Rapidly Changing Landscape. Advocates will learn first-hand about moving cancer survivorship advances from early-stage research to survivor care, interact with other advocate leaders and researchers, and develop tools to educate communities about key survivorship issues.
Program participants will be selected on the basis of their research advocacy experience, the potential impact conference attendance would have on their future advocacy work, and the strength of their proposed use of tools from the conference for community education. Priority will be given to applicants who have not participated in the program previously.
The scholarships, granted by The LIVESTRONG Foundation, provide funding for the conference registration fee, hotel, transportation, and meals. Applicants should not make any travel plans until they are accepted into the program and receive specific instructions regarding travel arrangements. Please note: the Survivor Advocate Program can only accept applications from advocates residing in the United States.
 

Program Elements

In addition to attending the full research conference, participants in the Survivor Advocate Program will participate in:
  • Two pre-conference orientation teleconferences
  • A three-hour pre-conference advocate session on the first day of the conference
  • Targeted talks by prominent cancer survivorship researchers and practitioners
  • Networking with researchers and other advocates 


Mismatch Repair Status may Predict Response to Adjuvant Chemotherapy in Resectable Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma (Lynch Syndrome)



Medscape (print version)

 In conclusion, our results show clear differences in the response to adjuvant chemotherapy between the mismatch repair-deficient and -proficient subgroups of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Since immunohistochemical analysis of mismatch repair system is an accessible and convenient method; this finding has the potential of rapidly changing the treatment algorithm for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. While our results show a robust difference between mismatch repair-deficient and -proficient cohorts with respect to adjuvant chemotherapy, validation of these findings in specimens from previously conducted randomized trials with an untreated control arm is required.
 

Table 1.  Resultant immunophenotypes for the 41 cases determined to be mismatch repair after full section confirmation

MLH1 MSH2 MSH6 PMS2 Prevalence (%)
Intact Loss Loss Intact 64
Loss Intact Intact Loss 25
Intact Loss Intact Intact 5
Loss Loss Intact Loss 2
Loss Intact Uninterpretablea Loss 2
Loss Uninterpretablea Intact Loss 2

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Screening for germline mutations in breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility genes in high-risk families in Israel



abstract

 We evaluated the clinical utility of screening for mutations in 34 breast/ovarian cancer susceptibility genes in high-risk families in Israel. Participants were recruited from 12, 2012 to 6, 2015 from 8 medical centers. All participants had high breast/ovarian cancer risk based on personal and family history. Genotyping was performed with the InVitae™ platform. The study was approved by the ethics committees of the participating centers; all participants gave a written informed consent before entering the study. Overall, 282 individuals participated in the study: 149 (53 %) of Ashkenazi descent, 80 (28 %) Jewish non-Ashkenazi descent, 22 (8 %) of mixed Ashkenazi/non-Ashkenazi origin, 21 (7 %) were non-Jewish Caucasians, and the remaining patients (n = 10-3.5 %) were of Christian Arabs/Druze/unknown ethnicity. For breast cancer patients (n = 165), the median (range) age at diagnosis was 46 (22-90) years and for ovarian cancer (n = 15) 54 (38-69) years. Overall, 30 cases (10.6 %) were found to carry a pathogenic actionable mutation in the tested genes: 10 BRCA1 (3 non-founder mutations), 9 BRCA2 (8 non-founder mutations), and one each in the RAD51C and CHEK2 genes. Furthermore, actionable mutations were detected in 9 more cases in 4 additional genes (MSH2, RET, MSH6, and APC). No pathogenic mutations were detected in the other genotyped genes. In this high-risk population, 10.6 % harbored an actionable pathogenic mutation, including non-founder mutations in BRCA1/2 and in additional cancer susceptibility genes, suggesting that high-risk families should be genotyped and be assigned a genotype-based cancer risk.

Can Cancer Patients Participate in More Than One Clinical Trial at a Time?



 Insight

Cream Skimming and Hospital Transfers in a Mixed Public-Private System (Australia/Canadian comment)



Blogger's Note: comment below per  Canadian Doctors for Medicare

Cream Skimming and Hospital Transfers in a Mixed Public-Private System

Cream skimming and hospital transfers in a mixed public-private system Cheng TC, Haisken-DeNew JP, Yong J. Soc Sci Med. 2015 May;132:156-64. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.03.035. Epub 2015 Mar 19.

Background
This paper investigates the phenomenon of cream skimming in Australia’s mixed public-private hospital setting, using the novel approach of analyzing hospital transfers. Cream skimming occurs when hospitals, surgical centres, and health care providers select patients with lower than expected treatment costs, thereby gaining financially. It can also occur through preferential selection of treatments with low cost relative to reimbursement rate, and by avoidance of treatments with high cost relative to reimbursement rate.

Pneumonitis in Patients Receiving Anti-PD-1/PD-L1 Therapy



Interview

(Canada) Compassionate care leave to expand up to 26 weeks starting Jan. 3 - Politics - CBC News



 CBC News

Monday, December 21, 2015

Clinical Considerations in Transdermal Hormone Therapy for Vasomotor Symptom Management



CME

blog: On menopause | Mosaic



Blogger's Note: briefly touches on surgical menopause but does give the history of HRT/ERT research (and opinions)

On menopause | Mosaic

.... Hannah Short, a trainee GP, and Natasha North, convener of Menopause UK, launched the #ChangeTheChange campaign in March 2015 in frustration at the confusing, poor information available not only to women, but to medical professionals. “The menopause wasn’t in any of my textbooks,” Short told me during the British Menopause Society conference coffee break. She’s heard of women going to one GP to be put on HRT, then going to another who takes them off it. She’s heard of one GP who said that women just need to pull themselves together. She told me of a nurse who had gone through a surgical menopause who was treated as a hypochondriac when she complained her oestradiol treatment wasn’t working.....

Cancer Pain—Health Professional Version



National Cancer Institute
 Cancer Pain–for health professionals (PDQ®)
 
Sections

Changes to This Summary (12/15/2015)

The PDQ cancer information summaries are reviewed regularly and updated as new information becomes available. This section describes the latest changes made to this summary as of the date above.
This summary was renamed from Pain.

Expert Calls for More Research in Checkpoint Blockade for Upper Tract Urothelial Cancers (Lynch Syndrome)



Expert Calls for More Research in Checkpoint Blockade for Upper Tract Urothelial Cancers

 The excitement among urologic oncologists about the potential for checkpoint blockade treatments, especially in bladder cancer, is almost palpable. Results from ongoing trials involving atezolizumab, pembrolizumab, nivolumab, and avelumab in bladder cancer are eagerly awaited. But there is one subset of patients who require special attention: patients with upper tract urothelial cancer (UTUC). The “upper tract” sessions created quite a buzz among the attendees of the Society of Urologic Oncology annual meeting in Washington, DC, December 2-4.

“For my presentation, I was charged with talking about checkpoint blockade in UTUC, a topic for which there are no data,”........In addition, preclinical work has been conducted in the pan epithelial space, but it is not specific to upper tract.

Plimack offered some initial steps to further elucidate UTUC. “The first step is to look at the subsets in these larger trials and to see if there’s anything that stands out in the group. It may be that they perform just as well in these metastatic trials. I think therapy directed toward upper tract will come after it is better defined in the wider group.”

Mutations and mutational burden may play a role in treatment for both chemotherapy and immunotherapy. In some upper tract tumors, especially those associated with Lynch syndrome or certain carcinogens, there may be a hypermutation phenotype that may render those tumors more susceptible to immunotherapy.

This may be significant because mismatch-repair status has been suggested as a potential predictor of clinical benefit with pembrolizumab in a phase II study by Le, et al. 6.....

.....Although some of the findings reported with checkpoint inhibitors have been dramatic, Plimack emphasized that there are adverse effects. “It’s important not to under-emphasize them,” she said. “Defining treatment related toxicity for some of these immunotherapy trials has been a challenge.”

One-Third of Incurable Cancer Patients Continue to Work, Study Finds



MedicineNet

Blood vessels and cancer much more than just angiogenesis



open access

Working after a metastatic cancer diagnosis: Factors affecting employment in the metastatic setting.....(comments?)



 Blogger's Note: there seems to be some key shortfalls in understanding this patient/family issue (re: scope of research); the full text is available to subscribers only ($$), however, supporting documentation (symptoms) is available:

supporting information may be found in the online version of this article.
FilenameFormatSizeDescription
cncr29656-sup-0001-suppinfo.docx
142KSupporting Information


abstract
 Working after a metastatic cancer diagnosis: Factors affecting employment in the metastatic setting from ECOG-ACRIN's Symptom Outcomes and Practice Patterns study

BACKGROUND

Improved survival for individuals with metastatic cancer accentuates the importance of employment for cancer survivors. A better understanding of how metastatic cancer affects employment is a necessary step toward the development of tools for assisting survivors in this important realm.

METHODS

The ECOG-ACRIN Symptom Outcomes and Practice Patterns study was analyzed to investigate what factors were associated with the employment of 680 metastatic cancer patients. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were conducted to compare patients stably working with patients no longer working.

RESULTS

There were 668 metastatic working-age participants in the analysis: 236 (35%) worked full- or part-time, whereas 302 (45%) had stopped working because of illness. Overall, 58% reported some change in employment due to illness. A better performance status and non-Hispanic white ethnicity/race were significantly associated with continuing to work despite a metastatic cancer diagnosis in the multivariate analysis. The disease type, time since metastatic diagnosis, number of metastatic sites, location of metastatic disease, and treatment status had no significant impact. Among the potentially modifiable factors, receiving hormonal treatment (if a viable option) and decreasing symptom interference were associated with continuing to work.

CONCLUSIONS

A significant percentage of the metastatic patients remained employed; increased symptom burden was associated with a change to no longer working. Modifiable factors resulting in work interference should be minimized so that patients with metastatic disease may continue working if this is desired. Improvements in symptom control and strategies developed to help address workplace difficulties have promise for improving this aspect of survivorship. 

Pathological Characterization of Ovarian Cancer Patients Who... : Medicine



 Blogger's Note: 33 (total study patients 46) = high-grade serous

open access
  
Article Tools
 
Abstract: Despite exhaustive efforts to detect early-stage ovarian cancers, greater than two-thirds of patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage. Although diaphragmatic metastasis is not rare in advanced ovarian cancer patients and often precludes optimal cytoreductive surgery, little is known about the mechanisms and predictive factors of metastasis to the diaphragm. Thus, as an initial step toward investigating such factors, the present study was conducted to characterize the pathological status of ovarian cancer patients who underwent debulking surgery in combination with diaphragmatic surgery.
This is a retrospective and cross-sectional study of patients who underwent debulking surgery in combination with diaphragmatic surgery at our institution between January 2005 and July 2015. Clinicopathological data were reviewed by board-certified gynecologists, pathologists, and cytopathologists. The rates of various pathological findings were investigated and compared by Fisher exact test between 2 groups: 1 group that was pathologically positive for diaphragmatic metastasis (group A) and another group that was pathologically negative for diaphragmatic metastasis (group B).

Forty-six patients were included: 41 patients pathologically positive and 5 pathologically negative for diaphragmatic metastasis. The rates of metastasis to the lymph node (95.8% vs 20%, P = 0.001) and metastasis to the peritoneum except for the diaphragm (97.6% vs 60.0%, P  = 0.028) were significantly increased in group A compared with group B. However, no significant differences between the 2 groups were found for rates of histological subtypes (high-grade serous or non-high-grade serous), the presence of ascites, the presence of malignant ascites, exposure of cancer cells on the ovarian surface, blood vascular invasion in the primary lesion, and lymphovascular invasion in the primary lesion.
Our study demonstrated that metastasis to the lymph node and nondiaphragmatic metastasis to the peritoneum are significantly associated with metastasis to the diaphragmatic peritoneum, indicating that these factors may be pathological predictors of diaphragmatic metastasis in patients with ovarian cancer. However, as the data available are not sufficient to demonstrate the predictive power of these factors, a further comprehensive, large-scale study should be performed.

Targeted Ovarian Cancer Education for Hispanic Women: A Pilot Program in Arizona



abstract

 In disadvantaged populations, including Hispanics, there is a deficit in understanding of cancer risk factors, symptoms, prevention, and treatment. The objective of this study was to assess ovarian cancer knowledge in a population of Hispanic women in Arizona, identify deficiencies, and to evaluate the utility of an educational program developed specifically for this community’s needs. A de novo questionnaire about ovarian cancer was distributed to Hispanic women enrolled in family literacy programs at Mesa Public Schools. Following this assessment, a video educational program was developed, with emphasis on areas of greatest knowledge deficits, and post-intervention assessment administered. Chi square, Wilcoxon rank sum, and Kruskal–Wallis tests were used for analysis. 167 questionnaires were completed in the pretest group and 102 in the post-intervention group. Between groups, there were no differences in age (p = 0.49), education (p = 0.68), or annual income (p = 0.26). In the pretest group, 45 % of questions were answered correctly versus 84 % in the post-test group (p < 0.01). 24.2 % of the initial respondents correctly identified ovarian cancer symptoms versus 85.6 of post-test respondents (p < 0.01). With the program, there was an increase in the number of correct post-test responses for each question and symptom (p < 0.01), except those about hereditary risk of ovarian cancer (p = 0.62) and pelvic anatomy (p = 0.16). Following identification of an ovarian cancer knowledge deficit in this cohort of Hispanic women, an educational tool targeting specific deficiencies successfully increased cancer knowledge and awareness of symptoms. Similar efforts in this and other minority populations should be continued.

FDA skims over benefits and costs of cooling cap it approved for reducing hair loss during chemo



HealthNewsReview.org

Total Score: 5 of 10 Satisfactory

Ovarian cancer screening: which story framing to believe?



healthnewsreviews

It also matters whom you choose to interview in the body of the story.  MedPage Today’s first expert quote was more skeptical than those that appeared first in most other stories

Let’s take a brief spin through the choices that news consumers (and patients) can make among a range of stories about a new study on ovarian cancer screening.
Should the emphasis be:
  • “Early Detection of Ovarian Cancer May Become Possible,” as the New York Times headlined it.  Although it followed with strong cautions:...........

...... What I’ve just outlined is part of the roulette that we play every day in perusing health care news.  Where will the ball land? Which news story will you happen to see?  And how will its framing compare with everything else out there? And while it’s not a game – not when people may make choices based on what they read in the news – the roulette analogy does hold up if people do actually make choices based on what they read in the news.

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Treatment of infertility does not increase the risk of ovarian cancer among women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation



abstract


Objective

To evaluate the relationship between use of fertility medication (i.e., selective estrogen receptor [ER] modulator, gonadotropin, or other) or infertility treatment (i.e., IVF or IUI) and the risk of ovarian cancer among women with a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation.

Design

A matched case-control study of 941 pairs of BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers with and without a diagnosis of ovarian cancer.

Setting

Genetic clinics.

Patient(s)

Detailed information regarding treatment of infertility was collected from a routinely administered questionnaire.

Intervention(s)

None.

Main Outcome Measure(s)

Conditional logistic regression was used to estimate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals associated with fertility treatment.

Result(s)

There was no significant relationship between the use of any fertility medication or IVF treatment (odds ratio, 0.66; 95% confidence interval 0.18–2.33) and the subsequent risk of ovarian cancer.

Conclusion(s)

Our findings suggest that treatment for infertility does not significantly increase the risk of ovarian cancer among women with a BRCA mutation

ESMO Asia Congress, 18-21 December 2015 Submitted abstracts



Table of Contents — December 2015, 26 (suppl 9)

Submitted abstracts

Risk of venous thrombo-embolic events in pregnant patients with cancer. - PubMed - NCBI



abstract
 

OBJECTIVE:

Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is one of the leading causes of pregnancy-associated death in the Western world. Cancer is a known risk factor for thrombosis outside of pregnancy. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of cancer on the risk of VTE, including deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) in pregnancy.

METHODS:

We conducted a retrospective population-based cohort study using the Health Care Cost and Utilization Project database from 2003 to 2011. Risk of developing DVT, PE and VTE among pregnant patients with the 10 most prevalent malignancies was measured using unconditional logistic regression analysis.

RESULTS:

A total of 2826 women were identified with underlying malignancies, among our study cohort of 7 917 453 women. Risk of VTE was increased among pregnant patients with cervical cancer (OR 8.64), ovarian cancer (OR 10.35), Hodgkin's disease (OR 7.87) and myeloid leukemia (OR 20.75). There was no increased risk of VTE among women with brain cancer, thyroid cancer, melanoma and lymphoid leukemia.

CONCLUSION:

Many cancers may increase risk of VTE in pregnancy. Appropriate thromboprophylaxis should be considered in some of these women, particularly those with hematological malignancies and gynecologic cancers.

Knowledge, attitudes, and intentions toward fertility awareness and oocyte cryopreservation among obstetrics/gyn U.S. resident physicians



abstract

 WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY:
Oocyte cryopreservation can be utilized to preserve fertility potential. Currently, no studies of US OB/GYN residents exist that question their knowledge, attitudes, and intentions toward discussing age-related fertility decline and oocyte cryopreservation with patients.

Pathogenic and likely pathogenic variant prevalence among the first 10,000 patients referred for next-generation cancer panel testing



open access: Genetics in Medicine : Nature Publishing Group

Purpose:

Germ-line testing for panels of cancer genes using next-generation sequencing is becoming more common in clinical care. We report our experience as a clinical laboratory testing both well-established, high-risk cancer genes (e.g., BRCA1/2, MLH1, MSH2) as well as more recently identified cancer genes (e.g., PALB2, BRIP1), many of which have increased but less well-defined penetrance.
  
Methods:

Clinical genetic testing was performed on over 10,000 consecutive cases referred for evaluation of germ-line cancer genes, and results were analyzed for frequency of pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants, and were stratified by testing panel, gene, and clinical history.

Results:

Overall, a molecular diagnosis was made in 9.0% of patients tested, with the highest yield in the Lynch syndrome/colorectal cancer panel. In patients with breast, ovarian, or colon/stomach cancer, positive yields were 9.7, 13.4, and 14.8%, respectively. Approximately half of the pathogenic variants identified in patients with breast or ovarian cancer were in genes other than BRCA1/2.

Conclusion:

The high frequency of positive results in a wide range of cancer genes, including those of high penetrance and with clinical care guidelines, underscores both the genetic heterogeneity of hereditary cancer and the usefulness of multigene panels over genetic tests of one or two genes.
 

Word documents

  1. Supplementary Table S1 (688 KB)

  2. Supplementary Table S2 (72 KB)

  3. Supplementary Table S3 (158 KB

Affiliations

  1. GeneDx, Gaithersburg, Maryland, USA

    • Lisa R. Susswein,
    • Megan L. Marshall,
    • Rachel Nusbaum,
    • Kristen J. Vogel Postula,
    • Scott M. Weissman,
    • Lauren Yackowski,
    • Erica M. Vaccari,
    • Jeffrey Bissonnette,
    • Jessica K. Booker,
    • Federica Gibellini,
    • Patricia D. Murphy,
    • Daniel E. Pineda-Alvarez,
    • Zhixiong Xu,
    • Gabi Richard,
    • Sherri Bale &
    • Kathleen S. Hruska
  2. BioReference Laboratories, Elmwood Park, New Jersey, USA

    • M. Laura Cremona,
    • Guido D. Pollevick &
    • Rachel T. Klein
  3. Department of Pediatrics and Medicine, Columbia University Medical Center, New York, New York, USA

    • Wendy K. Chung

Potential targets for ovarian clear cell carcinoma: a review of updates and future perspectives



Full Text

 Characteristics of ovarian CCC

The molecular features of CCC are summarized in Table 2 [22, 24, 46, 52, 53, 6172]. One major distinguishing characteristic is its higher incidence among Asian populations, particularly among Japanese women [2, 3, 56]. The reason for this is unknown, although CCC has been associated with endometriosis and endometriosis-associated ovarian cancers in 22–70 % of younger female patients [73]. Previous studies showed that ovarian endometrioma increases the risk for ovarian cancer, and 0.72 % of all cases of ovarian endometrioma later develop neoplasms [74].

Conclusion

As discussed above, the loss of ARID1A expression and/or PI3K activation is crucial for CCC tumorigenesis. Moreover, synergic effects of the loss of ARID1A expression and PI3K/AKT pathway activation and ZNF217 overexpression may be related to ovarian CCC development [99], warranting further studies of these associations and assessments of their potential as co-therapeutic targets for CCC.
CCC is highly resistant to current platinum-based treatment. However, if an AnxA4 blockade drug was developed, its use in combination with platinum drugs may have therapeutic activity against CCC.

Groundbreaking Trial Reports Positive Results on Screening for Ovarian Cancer



ACS Pressroom Blog
 
“As part of its ongoing guidelines development process, the American Cancer Society will review this new evidence and closely monitor on-going evaluation of the UKCTOCS data.”

You can read more about ovarian cancer, including statistics, risk factors, treatment and more here.

It's that time of year again (for you)




Study on the psychosocial aspects of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) in BRCA1/2 mutation carriers in Japan: a preliminary report



Objective This study investigated the psychosocial aspects of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy in Japan.
Methods The subjects were 16 patients who underwent risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy at the Cancer Institute Hospital. Worry about cancer, emotional state and cancer-specific distress level were evaluated using a four-point Likert scale, the Profile of Mood States-Short Form and the Impact of Event Scale-Revised, respectively, before and 1 year after the surgery. In addition, the subjects were interviewed regarding their expectation for the risk-reducing surgery, the effects of the surgery, and the recovery from surgery, before the surgery and at 1, 6 and 12 months after the surgery. A t-test or Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used for the analysis, and literal analects were prepared for the interview and the answers were organized per question item using NVIVO10.
Results The results revealed that the total score for worry about breast cancer and ovarian cancer (P = 0.021) as well as the Impact of Event Scale-Revised (P = 0.021) were significantly lower 1 year after surgery, compared with the values before the surgery. Regarding the preoperative expectations for the surgery, the expectation for reducing the cancer risk was the highest. The reported effects of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy on life included the appearance of menopausal symptoms, a loss of motivation and poor concentration; more effects were reported at 1 year after surgery than at 6 months after surgery.
Conclusions These results suggest that risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy can be effective for reducing worry about breast cancer and ovarian cancer and cancer-specific distress as well as contributing to a reduction in mortality from fallopian tube and ovarian related cancer.

PROSPECTIVE PHASE II TRIAL OF TRABECTEDIN IN BRCA MUTATED AND/OR BRCAness PHENOTYPE RECURRENT OVARIAN CANCER PATIENTS: THE MITO 15 TRIAL



Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Current evidence suggest that Trabectedin is particularly effective in cells lacking functional HR repair mechanisms. A prospective phase II trial was designed to evaluate the activity of Trabectedin in the treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer patients presenting BRCA mutation and/or BRCAness phenotype.

PATIENTS AND METHODS:

100 patients with recurrent BRCA mutated ovarian cancer and/or BRCAness phenotype (> 2 previous responses to platinum) were treated with Trabectedin 1.3 mg/mq i.v. q 3 weeks. Activity of the drug with respect to BRCA mutational status and to a series of polymorphisms (SNPs) involved in DNA gene repair was analyzed.

Ovarian, Fallopian Tube, and Primary Peritoneal Cancer Prevention (PDQ®) Health Professional Version



PDQ full text

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Time to restore Cochrane funding (Canada)



 Healthy Debate

Supplementary appendix: Ovarian cancer screening and mortality in the UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS



open access - pdf


Supplementary appendix
This appendix formed part of the original submission and has been peer reviewed.
We post it as supplied by the authors. 
 
Supplement to: Jacobs IJ, Menon U, Ryan A, et al. Ovarian cancer screening and mortality in the UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS): a randomised controlled trial.
Lancet 2015; published online Dec 17. http://dx.doi.
 
org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)01224-6

Annual Blood Test Might Help Prevent Deaths From Ovarian Cancer MedNews



MedNews


THURSDAY Dec. 17, 2015, 2015 -- An annual blood test to screen postmenopausal women for ovarian cancer could reduce deaths from this killer by 20 percent, a large British trial (the Lancet) suggests.
Currently, with no reliable screening method, most ovarian cancer is diagnosed at an advanced stage, and 60 percent of patients die within five years, the study authors explained.
Using newly developed software to analyze blood test results, the researchers hope routine testing can find cancer early when it's curable and significantly reduce deaths.
"This is an important step forward in managing a disease that has a very poor prognosis," said lead researcher Dr. Ian Jacobs, a professor at University College London.
"This is the first time that there has been evidence of a reduction in deaths from ovarian cancer through early detection by screening," he said. "It opens up the prospect that, in due course, a national screening program for ovarian cancer could become available alongside breast cancer and cervical cancer screening."
The study findings were published online Dec. 17 in The Lancet.
The trial enrolled more than 200,000 women aged 50 to 74 between 2001 and 2005. The women were randomly selected to have no screening (50 percent of the women); annual screening of a blood marker (CA125) plus ultrasound (25 percent of the study group); or ultrasound alone (the remaining 25 percent). Screening ended in December 2011.
Instead of a being a one-time blood test, this new approach analyzes a woman's CA125 pattern over time to detect any significant increase.
Over a follow-up of roughly 11 years, 630 women who had no screening were diagnosed with ovarian cancer, as were 338 women screened with the blood test and 314 screened with ultrasound alone.
At first glance, screening appeared to have no significant life-saving effect. But when the researchers excluded women who had undiagnosed ovarian cancer when they entered the study, an average reduction in deaths of 20 percent appeared.
According to Jacobs, 641 women would have to be screened to prevent one death from ovarian cancer.
Robert Smith, senior director of cancer control at the American Cancer Society, said, "With longer follow-up, the reductions in deaths will grow stronger and the numbers to screen to save a life will get smaller."
Smith said in breast cancer screening, which is deemed effective, nearly 1,400 women need to be screened to save one life.
"If you can prevent one death by screening 1,000 people, that's responsible public health," Smith said.
Among women in the study screened with the blood test, about 14 out of 10,000 underwent unnecessary surgery for what turned out to be normal ovaries. In these women, the major complication rate following surgery was 3 percent, the findings showed.
The study authors are optimistic about the findings.
"We knew from our previous studies conducted over a period of 30 years that screening was acceptable to women, that it had a low false-positive rate, achieved a high detection rate and could detect ovarian cancer at an earlier stage. We now have evidence to suggest that it saves lives," Jacobs said.
Further follow-up will clarify how great the impact is, and perhaps resolve questions regarding the risk-to-benefit ratio and cost-effectiveness of ovarian cancer screening, he said.
"When all of this information is available, decisions about implementing a national screening service can be made," Jacobs said. "In the meantime, women who are considering whether or not to undergo ovarian cancer screening and the health professionals who advise them will have more information from this report on which to base their decision."
Rene Verheijen, from the department of gynecological oncology at the UMC Utrecht Cancer Center in the Netherlands, said screening and early detection could prove to be "an alternative to aggressive and expensive treatments that try but fail to improve survival of patients with ovarian cancer."
However, Verheijen, co-author of an accompanying journal editorial, said more work is needed. "It remains to be seen whether this would mean that screening of all women would yield the same results," he said.
The American Cancer Society estimates that more than 21,000 U.S. women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2015, and more than 14,000 will die from it.

Biomed: What is wrong with this picture? – Shutting the stable door - On Biology



Biomed
 
Our new editorial series ‘What is wrong with this picture?’ has attracted some gratifying attention in the social media since it was launched in August, as well as in Mozilla Science’s Week in review and Weekend reads on Retraction Watch.

There has also been feedback from readers that suggests, in a way, that we’re the wrong people to be delivering its message.

The series, aimed at authors, illustrates some common ways in which scientific figures can mislead or obscure information, and was part of our recent efforts on reproducibility, accompanying the launch of a pilot ‘reproducibility checklist’ that authors are now required to complete before submitting a manuscript.

But the most important point to emerge from the feedback from readers so far (see samples below) is that the lessons it teaches ought to be taught, and learned, long before people are reading editorial comments in journals.....

chapter: Current Concepts in Pancreatic Cancer (including genetic presdispositions)



open access - pdf

Angiogenesis inhibitors for patients with ovarian cancer: A meta-analysis of 12 randomized controlled trials



Abstract
 
Objectives: To investigate the effects of angiogenesis inhibitors in the treatment for patients with advanced or recurrent ovarian cancer, a meta-analysis was performed and overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), and toxicity were assessed.
Patients and methods: The PubMed, Embase databases and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched for publications between January 2000 and June 2015....
Results: Twelve trials in this meta-analysis were divided into 3 groups: 4 trials with VEGF inhibitor (the bevacizumb group), 6 trials with VEGFR inhibitors (the VEGFRIs group), and 2 trials with angiopoietin inhibitor (the trebananib group). PFS improvement was seen in all groups (HR=0.61; 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.79; P<0.001 for bevacizumb, HR=0.71; 95% CI, 0.59 to 0.87; P=0.001 for VEGFRIs, and HR=0.67; 95% CI, 0.62 to 0.72; P<0.001 for trebananib). Regarding OS, bevacizumab showed a trend of improvement (HR=0.90; 95% CI, 0.80 to 1.01; P=0.079), VEGFRIs showed no improvement (HR=0.92; 95% CI, 0.75 to 1.11; P=0.368), and trebananib demonstrated a significant prolongation (HR=0.81; 95% CI, 0.67 to 0.99; P=0.036). Bevacizumab was associated with more class-specific adverse events (RR=4.05; 95% CI, 1.99 to 8.27, P<0.001). Although toxicity profile differed, VEGFRIs developed common higher incidences of hypertension, diarrhea, and fatigue. More incidences of edema was reported in the trebananib group (RR=2.60; 95% CI, 0.84 to 8.00, P=0.097).
Conclusions: Anti-angiogenic therapy showed clear PFS benefit with increased toxicity, but its role in OS was undefined for ovarian cancer which emphasized the need for patient selection.

Adult lifetime alcohol consumption and invasive epithelial ovarian cancer risk in a population-based case–control study - Gynecologic Oncology



Abstract
  
Highlights
  • Assessed adult alcohol consumption in 1144 epithelial ovarian cancer cases and 2513 controls
  • Guideline concordant alcohol consumption does not increase ovarian cancer risk
  • Higher levels of wine consumption associated with risk reductions; reductions may be stronger for red wine

Abstract

Objective

Meta-analyses report a null association between recent alcohol consumption and ovarian cancer risk. However, because few studies investigated different types of alcohol over adult ages, we investigated adult lifetime and type (beer, wine, spirits) of consumption and risk.....

Prognostic impact of debulking surgery and residual tumor in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer FIGO stage IV



abstract
 

Highlights

  • Residual disease after debulking surgery is a significant prognostic parameter in FIGO stage IV epithelial ovarian and fallopian cancer.
  • Largest survival benefit is detected for patients with complete tumor resection, followed by patients with residual disease of 1-10mm.
  • No survival difference was detected between patients with residual disease of >10mm after cytoreduction compared to patients having no surgery.
Objective

To determine the impact of debulking surgery (DS) and residual disease (RD) on outcome in patients with FIGO stage IV epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC).

Patients and methods

This exploratory study included 326 consecutive patients with FIGO IV EOC treated in our centers from 2000 to 2014. Data were extracted from our prospectively maintained registry.

OCNA response to the UKCTOCS ROCA & CA-125 Results



Ovarian Cancer National Alliance

 To watch the full announcement from UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening of the University College London, click here.

Commentary: Familial Carcinoma of Unknown Primary



JAMA Network (Lynch et al)

Familial Risk in Patients With Carcinoma of Unknown Primary



JAMA Network
 
Importance  Carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) accounts for 3% to 5% of all cancers and is associated with poor prognosis. Familial clustering of different cancer sites with CUP is unknown and may provide information regarding etiology, as well as elevated cancer risks in relatives.
Objective  To quantify the risk of cancer by site in first- and second-degree relatives and first cousins of individuals with CUP......

Studies Clash over Causes of Cancer (eg. bad luck/prevention...)



research news
 
Most cases of cancer result from avoidable factors such as toxic chemicals and radiation, contends a study published online in Nature on December 16 (S. Wu et al. Naturehttp://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature16166; 2015). The paper attempts to rebut an argument that arose early this year, when a report in Science concluded that differences in inherent cellular processes are the chief reason that some tissues become cancerous more frequently than others (C. Tomasetti and B. Vogelstein Science 347, 78–81; 2015).

The work led to assertions that certain forms of cancer are mainly the result of “bad luck”, and suggested that these types would be relatively resistant to prevention efforts. “There’s no question what’s at stake here,” says John Potter of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington, who studies causes of cancer. “This informs whether or not we expend energy on prevention.”.....

Industry-Funded Trials Up 43% as NIH-Funded Trials Drop 24%



medscape


.....From 2006 to 2014, the number of industry-funded clinical trials increased by 1965 (43%), whereas the number funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) decreased by 328 (24%), according to new analysis.
The findings, based on data from ClinicalTrials.gov for trials entered into the system during the study period, appear in a research letter
Despite the drop in the number of NIH-funded trials, the researchers found that the overall number of newly registered trials doubled from 9321 in 2006 to 18,400 in 2014.
"My concern is that independent trials are on the decline and that means we have less high-quality data to inform public health that are not influenced by commercial interests," lead author Stephan Ehrhardt, MD, MPH, an associate professor in the Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, said in a university news release. "When I am doing a government-funded trial comparing two treatments, I start with the assumption that both treatments are equal. I don't have a vested financial interest in the outcome......

The Myth Regarding the High Cost of End-of-Life Care



medscape

..... The discussion regarding the high-cost population in the United States has often focused on the population at the end of life, relying on evidence suggesting that those at the end of life drive health care spending.[11–17] This evidence is biased, however,.....

It's Totally Tubular....Riding The New Wave of Ovarian Cancer Research



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.

MR imaging of ovarian masses: classification and differential diagnosis



abstract
 

OBJECTIVE:

We propose a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) guided approach to differential diagnosis of ovarian tumours based on morphological appearance.

BACKGROUND:

Characterization of ovarian lesions is of great importance in order to plan adequate therapeutic procedures, and may influence patient's management. Optimal assessment of adnexal masses requires a multidisciplinary approach, based on physical examination, laboratory tests and imaging techniques. Primary ovarian tumours can be classified into three main categories according to tumour origin: epithelial, germ cell and sex cord-stromal tumours. Ovarian neoplasms may be benign, borderline or malignant. Using an imaging-guided approach based on morphological appearance, we classified adnexal masses into four main groups: unilocular cyst, multilocular cyst, cystic and solid, predominantly solid. We describe MR signal intensity features and enhancement behaviour of ovarian lesions using pathologically proven examples from our institution.

CONCLUSION:

MRI is an essential problem-solving tool to determine the site of origin of a pelvic mass, to characterize an adnexal mass, and to detect local invasion. The main advantages of MRI are the high contrast resolution and lack of ionizing radiation exposure. Although different pathological conditions may show similar radiologic manifestations, radiologists should be aware of MRI features of ovarian lesions that may orientate differential diagnosis.

TEACHING POINTS:

• Diagnostic imaging plays a crucial role in detection, characterization and staging of adnexal masses. • Characterization of an ovarian lesion may influence patient's management. • Different pathological conditions may have similar radiologic manifestations. • Non-neoplastic lesions should always be taken into consideration.