If you find out you have the BRCA gene, do not think that
surgery is your only option. There are
many ways to reduce the risk of ovarian cancer.
Research has found that breast feeding, birth control pills, and having
fallopian tubes tied all may help reduce the risk of ovarian cancer. Learn more in the article below and always
remember to talk with your doctor before making any decisions. You can learn more here.
Breast-feeding, birth
control pills and having fallopian tubes tied may help reduce ovarian cancer
risk in women with BRCA gene mutations, a new review suggests.
Women with BRCA gene
mutations are at increased risk for breast and ovarian cancers. These findings
suggest ways that women with these inherited mutations can reduce their ovarian
cancer risk without having their ovaries surgically removed, the University of
Pennsylvania researchers said.
“Patients deserve better
cancer-risk reduction options than surgically removing their healthy breasts
and ovaries,” review co-author Dr. Susan Domchek, executive director of the
Basser Research Center for BRCA at Penn Medicine’s Abramson Cancer Center, said
in a university news release.
Domchek and her
colleagues reviewed 44 studies and found that breast-feeding and tubal ligation
were associated with lower rates of ovarian cancer in women with a BRCA1
mutation, while the use of birth control pills was associated with a reduced
risk of ovarian cancer in women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.
The researchers also
identified factors that may increase the risk of cancer in women with BRCA
mutations. For example, smoking may heighten the risk of breast cancer in women
with a BRCA 2 mutation.
The findings are to be
published in the June issue of the Journal of the National Cancer
Institute.
“Our analysis reveals
that heredity is not destiny, and that working with their physicians and
counselors, women with BRCA mutations can take proactive steps that may reduce
their risk of being diagnosed with ovarian cancer,” lead author Timothy
Rebbeck, professor of epidemiology and cancer epidemiology and risk reduction
program leader at the Abramson Cancer Center, said in the news release.
“The results of the
analysis show that there is already sufficient information indicating how some
variables might affect the risk of cancer for these patients,” he added.
About 39 percent of
women with a harmful BRCA1 mutation and up to 17 percent of those with a
harmful BRCA2 mutation will develop ovarian cancer by age 70, compared with 1.4
percent of women in the general population.
Between 55 percent and
65 percent of women with a harmful BRCA1 mutation and 45 percent of women with
a harmful BRCA2 mutation will develop breast cancer by age 70, compared with
about 12 percent of women in the general population.
Both BRCA mutations
have also been linked with increased risk for several other types of cancer,
according to the researchers.
“It’s imperative that
we continue examining and building upon past research in this area so that we
can provide BRCA mutation carriers with options at every age, and at every
stage of their lives,” Domchek noted.
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