
High-grade Serous Carcinomas Follow Missed Salpingectomies
These findings suggest that more work is needed to optimize HGSC prevention, particularly in light of limited treatment options, Sara Moufarrij, MD, lead author of a paper reporting these results, and colleagues wrote.
'While OS is not expected to prevent the 10% of ovarian cancers that arise from the ovarian stroma or germ cells, it is projected to reduce the risk of the most common, deadly type of ovarian cancer — HGSC — by nearly 80%,' the investigators wrote in JAMA Surgery . 'Robust data support OS as standard of care at the time of hysterectomy and as an alternative to tubal ligation. There are likely other opportunities for integrating OS into routine surgical practice, such as when postreproductive women undergo other elective abdominopelvic surgeries.'
The new study combined a retrospective review of 1877 HGSC cases treated at Johns Hopkins and Memorial Sloan Kettering (2015-2021) with a national cross-sectional survey of 917 women in the Ovarian Cancer Research Alliance, including 348 with HGSC.
Missed opportunity was defined as either a sterilization procedure (bilateral tubal ligation or hysterectomy without concurrent salpingectomy) at any age, or another abdominopelvic surgery at age 45 or older when salpingectomy could have been performed at least 1 year before diagnosis. The cutoff age of at least 45 years reflected data showing most women complete childbearing by that age.
Among the 1877 patients in the retrospective cohort, 445 (23.7%) missed a surgical opportunity for salpingectomy. Of these, 54% were sterilization procedures and 46% were nongynecologic abdominopelvic surgeries, most often cholecystectomy, hernia repair, and bowel surgery. In the survey cohort, 11.5% reported a history of bilateral tubal ligation or hysterectomy without concurrent salpingectomy and 4% reported a history of abdominal surgery at 45 years or older without concurrent salpingectomy, meaning 15.5% missed an opportunity for the procedure.
Moufarrij, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York City, and colleagues also assessed germline genetic testing in the retrospective cohort. They found that 111 patients (6%) had a first-degree family history of ovarian cancer. Among these patients, 43.2% were found to have a genetic susceptibility to ovarian cancer that was detected after diagnosis.
How Does New Research Compare With Earlier Studies?
Prior modeling suggested that universal OS during hysterectomy, in lieu of tubal ligation, could reduce ovarian cancer mortality by 14.5% and save $445 million annually.
'We really did not have a great sense of how many cancers could be prevented this way,' Gillian Hanley, PhD, associate professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, at University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, told Medscape Medical News . This study provides 'one of the first clear estimates' of preventable HGSC cases, she said.
'By anchoring our analysis to the very population the intervention is designed to protect, we highlight the true magnitude of missed opportunity for prevention,' principal author of the new study, Rebecca L. Stone, MD, told Medscape Medical News .
The study is also notable for including genetic testing and general abdominal surgery as forms of missed opportunity, not just gynecologic surgery, said Stone, of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore.
How Can Clinicians Use These Findings in Practice?
'The take-home message is that we have an opportunity to dramatically reduce HGSC rates and save many lives,' Hanley said. 'We need to organize in order to take advantage of this opportunity.'
This means educating candidate patients — even those without pathogenic variants that increase their risk — Hanley said, noting that 'when people are properly counseled, they overwhelmingly choose OS.'
To realize the full potential for OS, however, these conversations, and the procedures themselves, will need to be conducted beyond the surgical gynecology service.
'High-volume abdominal procedures such as cholecystectomy, hernia repair, and bowel resections present the most logical next frontier for implementation,' Stone said. 'Engagement of general and colorectal surgeons is therefore a critical step in expanding the reach and impact of OS.'
In an accompanying editorial, Lauren Gilgannon, MD and Linda R. Duska, MD, of University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia, agreed but cautioned that achieving this goal will require 'novel and complex perioperative processes.'
What Are Barriers to General Surgeons Performing These Procedures?
The editorialists listed an array of financial, practical, and technical questions that will need to be addressed. These included: 'Will these be joint surgeries, or will the general surgeon perform them alone?' and 'How will the procedures be billed, and by whom?'
'Not all barriers to implementation are clear and they vary across hospitals, practices, patient demographics, socioeconomic status, and jurisdictions,' Gilgannon and Duska wrote.
'In order for this to work, general surgeons need to be compensated for doing this, so that is an important policy step,' Hanley said. 'They also need to feel comfortable and confident doing a salpingectomy, so offering general surgeons many different ways to learn salpingectomy has been important here in British Columbia, where we are actively expanding OS to general surgery.'
Stone offered concrete steps to improve OS access in the US, including payer reform, guideline development, provider education, and better detection of tubal precancer.
How Could Public Education Increase the OS Rate?
Outside of the medical system, Hanley suggested that educating the public about OS can yield immediate and tangible benefits.
'If more people come in asking for salpingectomy, already knowing what it is and why they want it, then we make it much easier for surgeons to offer this as part of their practice,' she said. 'The time it takes to counsel patients will be much smaller if we can increase general knowledge about OS.'
To this end, Stone envisions a future in which salpingectomy becomes a household word alongside other mainstays of preventive health.
'Education about salpingectomy must be woven into natural nodes of the healthcare journey, alongside conversations about contraception, pap smears, mammography, and colonoscopy,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Federal officials to take over inspections when troubled Boar's Head plant reopens
Federal inspectors will assume direct oversight of a troubled Boar's Head deli meat plant when it reopens after last year's deadly listeria outbreak, U.S. Agriculture Department officials said. The Jarratt, Virginia, factory is set to resume operations in the coming months. It will face at least 90 days of heightened monitoring and inspections by federal Food Safety and Inspection Service officials. Previously, inspections were conducted by state officials who operated on behalf of the agency. The change aims to 'ensure the establishment consistently and effectively implements its corrected food safety plans,' USDA officials said in a statement. It calls for stricter enforcement if lapses occur. The plant was shuttered nearly a year ago when listeria-tainted liverwurst caused the outbreak that killed 10 people, sickened dozens and forced a recall of more than 7 million pounds of deli products. USDA officials lifted the plant's suspension in July. In the years before the outbreak, state inspectors documented numerous problems at the plant, including mold, insects, liquid dripping from ceilings and meat and fat residue on walls, floors and equipment, records showed. They were operating under a cooperative agreement, the Talmadge-Aiken program, that allows state inspectors to conduct federal inspections. The shift to direct federal oversight underscores the severity of the problems at the Boar's Head plant, said Sandra Eskin, a former USDA official who now heads STOP Foodborne Illness, a consumer advocacy group. It raises concerns about communication between state and federal officials when problems occur, she added. 'Given its history, it's particularly important that there be robust oversight of that plant,' Eskin said. Boar's Head officials said in a statement that they have worked with state and federal regulators 'to ensure the successful and safe reopening of the Jarratt facility.' The company said it has boosted food safety practices in Jarratt and other sites aimed at reducing or eliminating listeria in finished products. The company has declined to comment on documents obtained by The Associated Press that showed that sanitation problems persist at other Boar's Head sites in three states. Between January and July, inspectors in Arkansas, Indiana and a second site in Virginia reported problems that include instances of meat and fat residue left on equipment and walls, drains blocked with meat products, beaded condensation on ceilings and floors, overflowing trash cans and staff who didn't wear protective hairnets and plastic aprons or wash their hands. Officials at the 120-year-old company based in Sarasota, Florida, hired a chief food safety officer in May. It also brought in a panel of experts, including Mindy Brashears, a food safety expert nominated by President Donald Trump for a second term as the USDA's undersecretary for food safety. Brashears, who now directs a food safety center at Texas Tech University, did not respond to requests for comment about Boar's Head. An automatic email reply said she was traveling out of the country until next week. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Jonel Aleccia, The Associated Press Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Gizmodo
10 minutes ago
- Gizmodo
Watch Live: SpaceX Launches Space Force's X-37B Spaceplane on New Military Test Mission
The U.S. Space Force's experimental spaceplane, X-37B, is ready for another go in orbit for an undisclosed duration, in which it will test new technologies aimed at bolstering military capabilities in space. The Boeing-built orbital test vehicle, designated as OTV-8, will attempt to launch on Thursday at 11:50 p.m. ET from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The spaceplane will ride on board a Falcon 9 rocket, marking the second time SpaceX launches the Space Force's orbital vehicle. The launch will be streamed live on SpaceX's website and the company's X account, and you can also tune in through the live feed below. The live feed will begin around 20 minutes before liftoff. Thursday's launch will mark the vehicle's eighth test flight, taking place just a few months after it wrapped up its previous mission. The spaceplane will carry an unidentified number of payloads for flight number eight, including a laser communications technology demonstration and a quantum sensor for navigation in space. Laser communication packs more data into each transmission, and it's considered more secure than the more commonly used radio frequency transmissions. The laser communications demonstration on board OTV-8 will rely on commercial satellites in low Earth orbit to transmit data using infrared light. OTV-8 will also use a quantum inertial sensor—an extremely precise device that measures acceleration using the principles of quantum mechanics—to enable navigation without having to rely on GPS. Previously, Space Force's spaceplane launched on December 28, 2023, for its seventh test flight, spending a total of 434 days in orbit before returning to Earth on March 7. The most recent mission was significantly shorter than its sixth test flight, which lasted for a record-breaking 908 days in orbit before landing at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in November 2022. With each launch, the Space Force may be shifting its focus toward a faster turnaround of its reusable, uncrewed vehicle rather than seeking to extend the duration of each flight. And with each passing mission, the X-37B has been losing its aura of mystery as the Space Force reveals more about the spaceplane's payloads. China is also developing its own spaceplane, named Shenlong, which completed its third mission in late 2024 after spending 268 days in orbit. The two nations are locked in a race to develop a reusable vehicle reminiscent of NASA's Space Shuttle, operating as a spacecraft in orbit and landing similar to conventional aircraft.

Associated Press
11 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Federal officials to take over inspections when troubled Boar's Head plant reopens
Federal inspectors will assume direct oversight of a troubled Boar's Head deli meat plant when it reopens after last year's deadly listeria outbreak, U.S. Agriculture Department officials said. The Jarratt, Virginia, factory is set to resume operations in the coming months. It will face at least 90 days of heightened monitoring and inspections by federal Food Safety and Inspection Service officials. Previously, inspections were conducted by state officials who operated on behalf of the agency. The change aims to 'ensure the establishment consistently and effectively implements its corrected food safety plans,' USDA officials said in a statement. It calls for stricter enforcement if lapses occur. The plant was shuttered nearly a year ago when listeria-tainted liverwurst caused the outbreak that killed 10 people, sickened dozens and forced a recall of more than 7 million pounds of deli products. USDA officials lifted the plant's suspension in July. In the years before the outbreak, state inspectors documented numerous problems at the plant, including mold, insects, liquid dripping from ceilings and meat and fat residue on walls, floors and equipment, records showed. They were operating under a cooperative agreement, the Talmadge-Aiken program, that allows state inspectors to conduct federal inspections. The shift to direct federal oversight underscores the severity of the problems at the Boar's Head plant, said Sandra Eskin, a former USDA official who now heads STOP Foodborne Illness, a consumer advocacy group. It raises concerns about communication between state and federal officials when problems occur, she added. 'Given its history, it's particularly important that there be robust oversight of that plant,' Eskin said. Boar's Head officials said in a statement that they have worked with state and federal regulators 'to ensure the successful and safe reopening of the Jarratt facility.' The company said it has boosted food safety practices in Jarratt and other sites aimed at reducing or eliminating listeria in finished products. The company has declined to comment on documents obtained by The Associated Press that showed that sanitation problems persist at other Boar's Head sites in three states. Between January and July, inspectors in Arkansas, Indiana and a second site in Virginia reported problems that include instances of meat and fat residue left on equipment and walls, drains blocked with meat products, beaded condensation on ceilings and floors, overflowing trash cans and staff who didn't wear protective hairnets and plastic aprons or wash their hands. Officials at the 120-year-old company based in Sarasota, Florida, hired a chief food safety officer in May. It also brought in a panel of experts, including Mindy Brashears, a food safety expert nominated by President Donald Trump for a second term as the USDA's undersecretary for food safety. Brashears, who now directs a food safety center at Texas Tech University, did not respond to requests for comment about Boar's Head. An automatic email reply said she was traveling out of the country until next week. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.