| Literature DB >> 36231355 |
Aruni Ghose1,2,3, Anita Bolina4, Ishika Mahajan5, Syed Ahmer Raza6, Miranda Clarke7, Abhinanda Pal8, Elisabet Sanchez3, Kathrine Sofia Rallis9,10, Stergios Boussios3,11,12.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynaecological malignancy. The search for a widely affordable and accessible screening strategy to reduce mortality from OC is still ongoing. This coupled with the late-stage presentation and poor prognosis harbours significant health-economic implications. OC is also the most heritable of all cancers, with an estimated 25% of cases having a hereditary predisposition. Advancements in technology have detected multiple mutations, with the majority affecting the BRCA1 and/or BRCA2 genes. Women with BRCA mutations are at a significantly increased lifetime risk of developing OC, often presenting with a high-grade serous pathology, which is associated with higher mortality due to its aggressive characteristic. Therefore, a targeted, cost-effective approach to prevention is paramount to improve clinical outcomes and mortality. Current guidelines offer multiple preventive strategies for individuals with hereditary OC (HOC), including genetic counselling to identify the high-risk women and risk-reducing interventions (RRI), such as surgical management or chemoprophylaxis through contraceptive medications. Evidence for sporadic OC is abundant as compared to the existing dearth in the hereditary subgroup. Hence, our review article narrates an overview of HOC and explores the RRI developed over the years. It attempts to compare the cost effectiveness of these strategies with women of the general population in order to answer the crucial question: what is the most prudent clinically and economically effective strategy for prevention amongst high-risk women?Entities:
Keywords: BRCA; cost effectiveness; genetic testing; guidelines; ovarian cancer; risk-reducing surgery
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36231355 PMCID: PMC9565024 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191912057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1The illustration shows distribution of gene mutations in ovarian cancer. (a) Proportion of sporadic (75%) and hereditary (25%) ovarian cancer cases. (b) Details of HOC. The inner circle shows the proportions contributed by HBOC and Lynch Syndrome. The outer circle demonstrates the divisions shared by prominent genetic mutations (BRCA1, BRCA2, TP53) and mutation groups (mismatch repair genes, double-strand-break repair genes) corresponding approximately to the syndromic association in the inner circle.
Preventive strategies recommended by various international organisations for hereditary ovarian cancer syndromes.
| Organization | Year | Population | Recommendation | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening | Risk-Reducing Intervention | |||||
| Chemoprevention | Surgery | |||||
| Society of Gynaecologic Oncology | 2015 | 1. HBOC | - | Long-term COCP for HBOC | HBOC—RRBSO at 35 to 40 years of age; RRBS if RRBSO declined | [ |
| European Society of Medical Oncology | 2016 | HBOC | 6 monthly MMS commencing from 30 years of age | Long-term COCP | RRBSO at 35 to 40 years of age | [ |
| American College of Obstetrics and Gynaecologists | 1. 2017, 2. 2014 | 1. HBOC | MMS as short-term surveillance (not screening) in HBOC at 30 to 35 years prior to RRBSO | - | 1. HBOC—RRBSO in | [ |
| Manchester International Consensus Group | 2019 | LS | Multigene panels using NGS technology involving | Long-term COCP | RRBSO + RRH at 35–40 years following childbearing | [ |
| United States Preventive Services Task Force | 2019 | HBOC | Familial risk assessment screening | - | - | [ |
| American Society of Clinical Oncology | 2020 | HBOC | Germline GT for all women diagnosed with EOC | - | - | [ |
| National Comprehensive Cancer Network | 2021 | 1. HBOC | MMS in HBOC at 30 to 35 years if RRBSO declined | - | HBOC-RRBSO in | [ |
COCP, combined oral contraceptive pill; EOC, epithelial ovarian cancer; GT, genetic testing; HBOC, hereditary breast and ovarian cancer; LS, Lynch syndrome; LFS, Li–Fraumeni syndrome; MMS, multimodal screening; NGS, next-generation sequencing; RRBS, risk-reducing bilateral salpingectomy; RRBSO, risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; RRH, risk-reducing hysterectomy.
Cost effectiveness of prevention strategies.
| Population | Year | Reference | Risk-Reducing Strategy | Cost Effectiveness of Intervention (ICER) | Comments | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General | 2012 | [ | Annual screening CA125 to predict candidates for TVS | USD 89,000/YLS, 13% mortality reduction | |||
| Semi-annual screening CA125 to predict candidates for TVS | USD 117,000/YLS, 20% reduction in mortality | ||||||
| 2016 | [ | MMS—Sequential ROCA | GBP 9000/QALY | ||||
| 2017 | [ | MMS with per unit cost of GBP 20 per patient | GBP 90,000/LYG | ||||
| MMS with per unit cost of GBP 15 per patient | GBP 78,000/LYG | ||||||
| 2018 | [ | MMS vs. no screening | 15% mortality reduction, ICER: USD 105,000–155,000 | ||||
| 2018 | [ | ROCA-based MMS commenced at age 50 for 20 years | 6% decrease in mortality with USD 590,000/LYG | ||||
| ROCA-based MMS commenced at age 50 for 30 years | 9% decrease in mortality with USD 760,000/LYG | ||||||
| 2015 | [ | RRBM | USD 27,000/LYG | ||||
| Hereditary Ovarian Cancer | BRCA 1/2 | 1998 | [ | RRBO at 30 years of age | 2.6 years survival improvement and QALY of 0.5 in favour of PO | ||
| 2006 | [ | RRBSO at age 35 | Most cost-effective with quality adjustment | ||||
| 2008 | [ | RRBSO | 85% decrease in BRCA1 OC, no statistically significant effect on BRCA2 OC | ||||
| 2008 | [ | RRBSO + RRBM | EUR 496/LYG | ||||
| RRBSO alone | EUR 1284/LYG | ||||||
| 2011 | [ | RRBM vs. RRBSO vs. RRBM+RRBSO vs. chemoprevention vs. surveillance | BRCA1 | PBSO—USD 1741/QALY | |||
| BRCA2 | PBSO—USD 4587/QALY | ||||||
| 2013 | [ | RRBS vs. RRSDO vs. RRBSO | BRCA1 | PSDO—USD 37,800/QALY | RRBSO yielded highest risk reduction, life expectancy and lowest cost, RRSDO had highest ICER | ||
| BRCA2 | PSDO—USD 89,700/QALY | ||||||
| 2018 | [ | RRBM vs. RRBSO vs. RRBM+RRBSO at age 30 vs. RRBM+RRBSO at age 40 | PBM + PBSO at age 30—cost of EUR 29,000 and 17.7 QALY gained or 19.9 LYG | ||||
| Lynch Syndrome | 2008 | [ | Annual screening from age 30 followed by RRH + RRBSO at age 40 vs. Only screening from age 30 vs. Only RRH +RRBSO at age 40 or 30 vs. No intervention | Annual screening from age 30 followed by PH + PBSO at age 40—USD 195,000/QALY | |||
| 2011 | [ | RRBSO+RRH at age 30 | USD 23,400 per patient and QALY-26 | ||||
| Strong Family History | 2019 | [ | No mutation testing vs. Cascade testing followed by RRS | Cascade testing followed by RRS—USD 9000–10,000 per QALY | |||
| 2019 | [ | Intensified surveillance followed RRS (RRBM/ RRBSO/ RRBM+RRBSO) | EUR 17,000/QALY and EUR 22,000/LYG | Prevented one-third of malignancies, RRBM + RRBSO was the most cost-effective RRS | |||
| Ashkenazi Jewish Women | 1999 | [ | Surveillance followed RRS (RRBM + RRBSO) | USD 21,000/LYG | |||
| 2009 | [ | Screening + RRBSO vs. no screening | USD 8300/QALY | ||||
| 2014 | [ | Population-based screening vs. Family-based screening, both followed by RRS | Population-based screening—GBP 2079/QALY | Done in population with index cases of 4 AJ Grandparents | |||
| 2017 | [ | Population-based screening followed by RRBSO | 1 AJ Grandparent | GBP 2793/USD 7110/QALY (UK/US) | Highly cost-effective even in varying AJ ancestry | ||
| 2 AJ Grandparents | GBP 301/USD 7366/QALY (UK/US) | ||||||
| 3 AJ Grandparents | GBP 1759/USD 14,032/QALY (UK/US) | ||||||
| 4 AJ Grandparents | GBP 2589/USD 17,786/QALY (UK/US) | ||||||
| Sephardi Jewish Women | 2018 | [ | Population based screening vs. Family based screening | £67/$308/QALY (UK/US) | |||
AJ, Ashkenazi Jews; LYG, life years gained; ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; MMS, multimodality screening; QALY, quality adjusted life years; ROCA, Risk of Ovarian Cancer Algorithm; RRBM, risk-reducing bilateral mastectomy; RRBO, risk-reducing oophorectomy; RRBSO, risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; PBM, prophylactic bilateral mastectomy; PBSO, prophylactic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; RRH, risk-reducing hysterectomy; RRS, risk-reducing surgery; RRSDO, risk-reducing bilateral salpingectomy with delayed oophorectomy; TVS, transvaginal scan; YLS, years of life saved.