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Inherited BRCA
Mutations Improve Treatment Response and Survival Among Ovarian Cancer Patients Behind the Cancer Headlines® May 6, 2003 In the last decade,
much attention has focused on the gene abnormalities linked to certain
diseases. Wide attention, for example, has focused on hereditary mutations of
the BRCA genes, which can lead to the development of breast and ovarian cancer.
But in recent years,
researchers have also learned that ovarian cancer patients who inherit BRCA
mutations may live longer than patients who do not. The reason for this
survival advantage, however, has not been identified. Now, researchers at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center have found that improved survival among patients
with hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian cancer may result from a greater
sensitivity and response to treatment with chemotherapy. Their findings,
reported in the journal Cancer, may enable physicians to better plan
treatment for their patients with BRCA-linked ovarian cancer. "We found that
advanced stage hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian cancer patients had a better
response to platinum-based chemotherapy than patients without BRCA-mutations
who had advanced disease," said Ilana Cass, M.D., the principal
investigator of the study and gynecologic oncologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center. "This may contribute to their improved prognosis." Evidence suggests
that normal BRCA genes control cell growth and repair damage to DNA. But when
defective, the genes fail to function properly and can lead to the development
of breast or ovarian cancer. In fact, about 10 percent of invasive ovarian
cancers are due to an inherited mutation in either the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. Ashkenazi Jewish
women have the highest prevalence of these genes, with about two percent
carrying mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2. Of those women who carry mutations in
BRCA genes, 16 to 44 percent develop ovarian cancer. Although several
studies have shown that patients with hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian
cancers live longer, the basis for this survival advantage is unknown. Some
research has suggested that longer survival may be due to a younger age at
diagnosis, while other studies have suggested that hereditary BRCA-associated
ovarian cancer patients respond better to chemotherapy. To determine why
hereditary BRCA mutations lead to better survival among ovarian cancer
patients, the investigators examined the tumor characteristics, treatment
responses and survival outcomes of Ashkenazi Jewish women with ovarian cancer
who carry hereditary BRCA-mutations as compared to those who do not. In the study, 71
Ashkenazi Jewish women with ovarian cancer underwent screening blood tests to
determine whether inherited BRCA mutations were present. The investigators
found that 34 patients, or almost half, carried BRCA mutations, with a higher
proportion of patients carrying mutations in the BRCA1 gene. "This finding
was not surprising given that about 50 percent of Ashkenazi Jewish patients who
have ovarian cancer are found to carry mutations in BRCA genes," said
Cass. The investigators
also screened 54 of 71 available tumor specimens to determine whether there was
a coexisting mutation in the p53 gene that led to an over-abundance of the p53
protein in their tumor sample. P53 mutations have been reported more frequently
in patients with hereditary BRCA mutations, and may influence patient survival.
They found that although p53 was over-expressed in more of the hereditary
BRCA-associated tumors and that these patients lived slightly longer than those
without inherited BRCA mutations, the length of survival time did not prove to
be statistically significant. To determine whether
patients with hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian cancer had a better response
to chemotherapy, the investigators' limited their analysis of patient survival
and tumor response to patients with invasive, advanced stage ovarian cancer who
were treated with combination platinum-based chemotherapy. Response to
chemotherapy was defined by three criteria: a negative "second look"
surgery, in which a second surgical procedure was performed following primary
chemotherapy to check whether any residual cancer was present; a measurable
reduction in tumor size; or no detectable disease found five years after
diagnosis. Their analysis
revealed that 86 percent of patients with hereditary BRCA mutations had no
recurrent disease at second look surgery as compared to 41 percent of patients
with ovarian cancer but without BRCA-mutations. The average survival time among
patients with advanced stage hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian cancer was 91
months as compared to 54 months. Further, hereditary BRCA-associated ovarian
cancer patients remained free of disease for 49 months as compared to 19 months
for patients without BRCA-associated disease. "The significantly
longer survival of patients with BRCA-associated ovarian cancers in our study,
points to an enhanced tumor responsiveness to platinum-based chemotherapy,
rather than less aggressive disease," said Dr. Beth Karlan, senior author
of the study and Director of the Women's Cancer Research Institute at
Cedars-Sinai. "Knowing how BRCA mutations increase response to treatment
may lead to the development of targeted therapies or drugs that will improve
survival for all women with ovarian cancer and point to novel means of cancer
prevention." SOURCES: Cancer, May 1, 2003 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (http://www.csmc.edu) DISCLAIMER!Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) is a service of Willis-Knighton Cancer Center.The articles in Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) are written by national medical editorsand writers who review current literature and develop timely articles in non-technicallanguage. Sources of information are cited for each article. If you have questions, referto the sources listed or to your physician. Willis-Knighton Cancer Center is notresponsible for content. Articles are updated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. This information is provided for information only and is not a substitute for informationfrom or care by a physician. |
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