The transvaginal ultrasound screening may not be reliable enough to detect ovarian cancer. The only option removing the ovaries.
Ultrasound screening to detect ovarian cancer is not all that reliable, say UK researchers. Perhaps the only option to prevent ovarian cancer death is to remove the ovaries, they say.
In the test, transvaginal ultrasound is coupled with a blood test for CA125, a protein that can be elevated in the setting of ovarian cancer."We and other groups confirm that the current method of ovarian screening, which is a combination of ultrasound scans and (blood) markers, is ineffective," Dr. Emma R. Woodward from Birmingham Women's Hospital, UK, told Reuters Health.
The early diagnosis of ovarian cancer is difficult and the disease is often not detected until it has reached an advanced stage.
In a "look-back" study, Woodward and colleagues assessed the effectiveness of ovarian cancer screening with the CA125 blood test plus transvaginal ultrasound, which involves placing an ultrasound probe into the vagina to detect abnormalities in the ovaries, in 341 women with a family history of ovarian cancer.
Out of 1,084 surveillance ultrasounds, 929 (86 percent) were normal and 155 (14 percent) were abnormal, the investigators report. Only 18 (2 percent) of 875 surveillance CA125 tests were abnormal.
Fifty-seven women (17 percent) had their ovaries removed as a preventive measure and 30 of the remaining women had "exploratory" surgery following abnormal surveillance ultrasound or CA125 testing.
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Based on these findings Woodward suggests that, for those women who are not at high risk for ovarian cancer, "ovarian cancer screening should not be offered unless it is within a clinical trial aimed at developing new methods for ovarian screening."
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"Furthermore, the few women who do develop ovarian cancer are unlikely to be diagnosed at an early stage when the disease is curable."
Source-Medindia
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