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Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital www.obermair.info

Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

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Page 1: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Familial Gynaecological Cancers

A/Prof Andreas Obermair

Gynaecological OncologistRBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

www.obermair.info

Page 2: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Major Known Mutations

• BRCA1

• BRCA2

• Mismatch Repair Genes

• Other undiscovered

Page 3: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Hereditary Ovarian Cancer

• BRCA1 life-time risk 16-54%

• BRCA2 life-time risk 10-25%– Risks vary depending on the population

being studied

• ~10% of cancer due to these genes

• ? Primary Peritoneal Cancer, Fallopian Tube Cancer

Page 4: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

HNPCC(Lynch Syndrome Type II)

• Microsatillite DNA sequences which are prone to mutation during replication

• HNPCC & endometrial cancer

• Rare: Urological tumours

• MSH2 & MLH1 genes most commonly implicated

Page 5: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

HPNCC/mismatch repair genes

• Most have colon cancer penetrance of 30-70%

• Endometrial Ca 42%– Annual Uterine sampling &Transvaginal

Ultrasound– Hysterectomy at time of colectomy

Page 6: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Cancer Gene Testing in Qld

• Qld Clinical Genetics Service established in 1995

• Funding for 50 tests per year– Uses software to estimate individuals with a

risk >15%– May not detect all predisposing mutations

• Requires a blood sample from an affected living relative

Page 7: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Hereditary Ovarian Cancer

• 4 Cohort studies (2 retrospective, 2 prospective)

• 1 family history only, 3 BRCA mutations

• All 4 studies found protective effect of surgery

• Variability in patient populations & patient methodology

Page 8: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Rebbeck et al. The Prevention and Observation of Surgical end points Study Group. Prophylactic oophorectomy in carriers of BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. N.Eng.J.Med. 346(2002),pp.1616-1622

• Retrospective cohort of 259 women with BSO and 292 no BSO (matched control group)

• BSO group – 6 cases of stage 1 ovarian ca– 2 cases of peritoneal ca found 3.8&8.6 yrs later

• No BSO –58 ovarian ca (8.8yrs median follow-up)

– Only 6 stage 1(11%)

Page 9: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Kauff et al. Risk reducing salpingo-oophorectomy in women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation. N.Eng.J.Med.346(2002),pp 1609-1615

• Prospective

• 98 BSO vs. 72 who chose not to have BSO

• 2 groups similar age & other risk factors– Mean follow-up 25.4 months

• BSO – 1 peritoneal Ca (16.3 months)

• No BSO –4 ovarian Ca– 8 breast Ca, 1 peritoneal Ca

Page 10: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Piver et al. Familial Ovarian Cancer.A report of 658 families from the Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Cancer Registry 1981-1991. Cancer 71(1993) pp582-588

• 324 women (familial ovarian cancer registry) with family history of 2 or more 1st or 2nd degree relatives with ovarian Ca

• All patients had prophylactic BSO

• 6 women primary peritoneal Ca (1.9%)

• Residual risk of Primary Peritoneal Cancer

Page 11: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Summary Prophylactic Surgery

• Risk of ovarian cancer reduced by > 95%– Most patients found at stage 1 (prognosis )

• Risk of breast cancer reduced by 50%

• Risk of occult cancer found at surgery 14 to 18%

• Residual risk of primary peritoneal cancer < 2%

Page 12: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Risks of surgery

• Risks of laparotomy ~ 17%

• Risks of laparoscopy ~ 4%

Page 13: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Elit et al . Prophylactic oophorectomy in Ontario. Fam.

Cancer 1 (2001),pp. 143-148

• Ontario Hospital based study 41 institutions prophylactic BSO from 1992-1998

• 274 pts (141 co-existent gynae problems)

• 15.7% complications –bleeding, infection, damage to organs - most laparotomy

Page 14: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Krauf et al. Risk reducing salpingo-oophorectomy in women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. N.Eng.J.Med.346(2002),pp. 1609-1615

• 98 BSO - complications 4

• 1 re-operation for small bowel obstruction

• Increasing trend to laparoscopy with risk of complications 0.22-4.0%

Page 15: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Long-term adverse effects

• Menopause – lipid profile– 2x CAD– Osteoporosis– Higher rate of decreased libido & sexual

satisfaction

• Role of HRT

Page 16: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Surgical Options

• Minimum of BSO– Occult ovarian or fallopian tube Ca – Fallopian tube and Infundibulo-Pelvic Ligament

need to be removed completely.– Age? Uncommon in women < 35 years

• Peritoneal lavage for cytology– 35 women, 3 + cytology

• 1occult fallopian tube Ca, 1 fallopian ACIS• 1 no histological evidence of Ca

– Coglan et al. Gynecol Oncol. 85(2002), pp.397-403

Page 17: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Role of Hysterectomy

• ? Increased risk of endometrial Ca

• Hysterectomy guarantees complete resection of fallopian tube

• HRT simplified

But increased morbidity

Page 18: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Benefits on Breast Cancer

• Prophylactic BSO protective for breast Ca• RR 0.47(95% CI 0.29-0.77)

• HRT did not negate the reduction in breast Ca• Rebbeck et al Natl. Cancer Inst. 91(1999) pp1475-1479

• Proportion Breast Ca free at 5 yr – 94% BSO group

– 79% surveillance group(p=0.07)• Kauff et al N.Engl.J.Med. 346(2002),pp 1609-1615

Page 19: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Alternative to oophorectomy

• Oral contraceptives - Controversies– 60% reduction in Ovarian Cancer if used for

>6yrs• Narod et al. N.Engl.J.Med.339(1998)

– No reduction in study in IsraelBut small study & wide confidence limits• Modan et al. N.Eng.J.Med. 345(2001)

Page 20: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Tubal Ligation

• Associated with decreased incidence in general population (?reason)

• BRCA1 Tubal ligation in 232 assoc with odds ratio of 0.39 (95% confidence limits 0.22-0.70)

• Tubal ligation & OCP 0.28 (95% confidence limits 0.15-0.52)

– Narod et al. Lancet. 357(2001)pp.1467-1470

Page 21: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Perceptions of women with BRCA1/2 Mutations

• Psychological testing on those with surgery vs. observation,

• Anxiety reduced with surgery,

• 86% high level of satisfaction.

Tiller et al.: Gynecol Oncol 2002

Page 22: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Discussion• No randomized control trials of surgery vs.

observation

• Cohorts studies showed risk reduction• Complications are low (note impact of laparoscopic surgery)

• Optimal procedure is not well defined• Fallopian tube ca

• Role OCP & tubal ligation

Page 23: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

Conclusions

• Women with family history should be assessed for genetic counseling & possible testing

• Surgery - ovary + fall. tube MUST BE removed

• Young women (< 35 years) >> ?role of OCP+/- tubal ligation

Page 24: Familial Gynaecological Cancers A/Prof Andreas Obermair Gynaecological Oncologist RBWH, Greenslopes Private Hospital

www.obermair.info07 3830 5824