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PRESS RELEASE: Studies of Prophylactic Surgery May Overestimate
Risk Reductions
The risk reductions suggested by studies examining the value of
prophylactic surgery for the prevention of breast and ovarian
cancer in high-risk women may be over- or underestimated because
of potentially unrecognized biases in study design, according
to a commentary in the July 2 issue of the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute.
Understanding these biases might help researchers
better evaluate past studies and improve the design of future
studies.
Women who carry germline mutations in the breast and ovarian cancer
susceptibility genes BRCA1 and BRCA2 are at increased risk of
breast and ovarian cancer.
In studies, prophylactic bilateral
mastectomy has been associated with an 85% to 100% reduction
of breast cancer risk. Prophylactic oophorectomy (surgery to
remove the ovaries) has been associated with a similar risk reduction
in ovarian cancer and in breast cancer.
Hester M. Klaren, M.D., Matti A. Rookus, Ph.D., and their colleagues
from the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam, caution that
such studies contain a number of potential biases.
One such bias
is confounding by indication, which occurs when comparing surgery
and nonsurgery patients who are from families with a different
baseline risk of breast and ovarian cancer.
This form of bias
may lead to an underestimation of risk reduction after prophylactic
oophorectomy.
Familial-event bias may occur when a woman's decision to undergo
prophylactic surgery for a certain cancer is influenced by events
involving a family member who was recently diagnosed with that
cancer or died from that cancer.
If this familial event is also
included in the study, this may result in bias.
As a consequence,
cancer risk among women in the nonsurgery group may be overestimated,
and this will result in an overestimation of the risk reduction
after prophylactic surgery.
Other potential biases include survival bias, detection bias,
testing bias, and confounding by other risk factors for breast
and ovarian cancer.
The authors say that such biases need to be considered seriously,
particularly because most biases seem to result in an overestimation
of the benefit from prophylactic surgery.
They say that a more
critical discussion about potential biases, including an estimation
of their direction and quantitative impact, is needed.
"Only in this way can BRCA1/2 mutation carriers, clinical geneticists,
and treating physicians obtain more accurate information about
the true extent of cancer risk reduction from prophylactic surgery,"
they say.
"This valid estimate of risk reduction may become even
more crucial in the future when data become available regarding
the efficacy of new surveillance methods, such as magnetic resonance
imaging, and new chemoprevention agents, such as raloxifene."
[07/02/2003; Journal of the National Cancer Institute]
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