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2012 OCRP Investigator Vignette
Title: Assessing and Reducing Familial Ovarian Cancer Risk
Investigator: Mary B. Daly, MD, PhD; Fox Chase Cancer Center
In the early 90s when we were just learning about familial causes of cancer and beginning
to understand that there could be a genetic cause to some of these cancers; unlike breast
cancer where there was a lot of information available to the public, there was almost
nothing back then for these women who were at increased risk because they had a relative
with ovarian cancer. And they were very hungry for information, education; what they could
do to affect their risks, what would their daughters’ risks be. And in 1991 we established
a formal family risk assessment program for women with ovarian cancer, either themselves
or a loved one’s ovarian cancer.
Grant funding is pretty much reserved for studying a scientific hypothesis. And the
DoD offered us an opportunity to get grant funding to set up the infrastructure for this
family program. So it was one of the few funding opportunities to get such a program started
and off the ground. The goal of that grant was to organize a family risk assessment program
around risk for ovarian cancer. It enabled us to recruit many family members from these
families, the men as well as the women, so that we could learn about how these cancers
filter through families. And that was when we learned, for instance that ovarian cancer
genes can be passed on through the paternal side of the family as well as the maternal
side.
So we collected vast amounts of information. By that I mean family histories, medical histories,
histories of exposure to perhaps carcinogens in the environment, hormone and reproductive
histories. And we collected a blood sample from everyone who joined the registry. We
have a bio-bank, and still do, of everyone who joined the registry so that we could begin
to make these resources available to investigators both here and at other institutions to do
research on the causes and prevention of ovarian cancer.
The importance of having a program like this that was funded by the DoD is that we can
share these resources and leverage it for additional studies, additional collaborations,
and partnering with other institutions and scientists. This is particularly important
for ovarian cancer because it’s rare and no one institution can collect enough of these
families to have meaningful statistics.
Over the past few years, by sharing information with other institutions, we’ve been involved
with several large consortia of investigators not just in the United States but across the
world. And a lot of interesting information has evolved from these collaborations. One
important one I think that’s immediately clinically relevant is the discovery of what
is the impact of prophylactic oophorectomy on subsequent ovarian cancer risk. So we together
with several other institutions studied several thousand women who were BRCA carriers who
underwent prophylactic surgery and compared them to women of the same risk who chose not
to have surgery and have now established without any doubt that there’s about a 95% reduction
in risk of developing ovarian cancer from the surgery.
It’s also allowed us to see what the impact on breast cancer. By removing the ovaries
we reduce the risk of breast cancer presumably by eliminating the hormonal contribution to
breast cancer. And we’ve also learned some of the negative side effects of removing the
ovaries from young women; the long-term cardiovascular and bone mineral density effects. So we’ve
established quite a body of information that will help women make a decision regarding
surgery.
The other DoD grant that we had was an Idea Grant to study quality of life after prophylactic
surgery. And what we found was while there were definitely some short-term differences
between women who chose surgery and those who did not, short-term complications, the
effect of immediate surgical menopause, the good news was that by the end of the year,
after having surgery, most of these problems had resolved and there was no decrement in
quality of life. And in fact, the women who had had the surgery, because of the relief
of anxiety about getting ovarian cancer, actually felt better. They are concerned about the
risk of early menopause and so they tend to wait until they’re around 40, and we now
have approximately 75% of women with one of these mutations eventually choose prophylactic
surgery. So the numbers have increased considerably.
On the basis of our OCRP grant we competed successfully for an ovarian SPORE grant which
is now in its thirteenth year. And we’ve been very involved from the very beginning
with our families who are very much a part of the SPORE grant, and none of that would
have been possible had we not had the original OCRP grant.
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