Fallopian operation 'may cut ovarian cancer risk'
Posted by Oluseyi Olaniyi
Posted on Saturday, August 03, 2013
with No comments
A doctor has raised the idea of women at high risk of ovarian
cancer having their Fallopian tubes removed as a precaution.
Cancer Research UK said there was no evidence how effective it would
be.
The Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie had a double mastectomy to
reduce her chances of getting breast cancer after finding out she had
a faulty BRCA gene.
The same mutation can also cause ovarian cancer. Prof Sean Kehoe
said removing fallopian tubes might help.
Some people with the mutation do have their ovaries and the
connecting fallopian tubes removed to prevent ovarian cancer.
'Avoiding earlier menopause'
Prof Kehoe, of the charity Wellbeing of Women and the University of
Birmingham, argues that just removing the tubes could help many
women.
He said: "The main advantage of this approach would be hopefully
giving some protection but avoiding earlier menopause, as normally
the ovaries would be removed.
"Recent studies suggest that the fallopian tubes may be the source of
up to 50 per cent of so-called ovarian cancers, though research is
ongoing."
However, patients would still need to have a second operation later to
remove the ovaries and Prof Kehoe admitted there was a "need to
research this in much more detail".
About 7,000 women develop ovarian cancer annually, making it the
fifth most common cancer in women in the UK.
Taking contraceptive pill
Dr James Brenton, an ovarian cancer expert at Cancer Research UK,
said: "Removing the fallopian tube from women with a BRCA fault
could reduce their risk of developing ovarian cancer without the side-
effects that removing the ovaries would have.
"But there have been no studies to show how effective this could be.
"Any woman who carries a BRCA fault should speak to her doctor to
discuss the possibilities for them.
He said there were other things women could do to reduce their risk,
such as taking the contraceptive pill for three years before the age of
30.
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