AI Article Synopsis

  • A survey was conducted among women at risk for BRCA to explore their decisions regarding prophylactic surgeries and risks of uterine cancers, involving 601 respondents predominantly female and well-educated.
  • Out of those who had risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO), over half also underwent a hysterectomy, with the most common motivations being provider recommendations and personal desire.
  • Despite the low incidence of uterine cancer (with only nine cases diagnosed in the cohort), further research is suggested to determine which patients might benefit from simultaneous hysterectomy and RRSO.

Article Abstract

In this study, women at risk for BRCA were surveyed to understand their choice of prophylactic surgery and associated risk of uterine cancers. The study was conducted as an anonymous online web-based survey that assessed personal and family histories and choice of prophylactic surgery. Respondents were targeted through social media groups that bring awareness to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. The study cohort included an international group of 601 respondents. The majority were female (99.3%), in their 40s (34.2%), and had completed college or graduate school (68.8%). 87% of respondents carry BRCA gene mutation. Of 339 respondents who underwent risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO), 55.8% had a hysterectomy at time of RRSO. Most common reasons for hysterectomy at time of RRSO included: 39% provider recommendation, 27.6% personal desire, 9.7% benign indications, 1.6% cancer in uterus, 1.1% precancerous uterine lesion, and 21.1% other (N = 185). In this cohort, nine were diagnosed with uterine cancer. Three were diagnosed after risk-reducing surgery. Both patients with uterine serous carcinoma were BRCA1 carriers. Two thirds of BRCA carriers surveyed had undergone RRSO. Of these, more than half had hysterectomy at time of RRSO. One third chose to have hysterectomy based on surgeon recommendation. <1% (2 out of 258) of BRCA1 gene mutation carriers reported being diagnosed with uterine serous carcinomas. While this incidence is low, it may be an underestimate based on the limitations of this study. Additional studies are needed to select which patients will benefit from concurrent hysterectomy and RRSO.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6198097PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gore.2018.10.003DOI Listing

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