MONDAY, Dec. 13 (HealthDay News) -- Available ovarian cancer
screening only slightly reduces the number of deaths from the
disease, a new study finds.
Until more sensitive screening tests can be developed, other
strategies, such as better prevention and treatment, are needed to
significantly reduce deaths from ovarian cancer, the researchers
from Duke University Medical Center said.
The study team used a computer-based model of ovarian cancer
progression to assess how effective screening is in reducing deaths
from the disease. The model took into account that some types of
ovarian cancers grow slowly while others grow more quickly.
Annual screening leads to only a modest decrease in ovarian
cancer deaths, found the study, published online Dec. 13 in the
journal
Cancer.
"If we assume ovarian cancers grow and spread at different rates, the best screening strategy available will only reduce the number of women dying from this cancer by 11 percent. This is partially because the slower-growing cancers are more likely to be caught by a screening test," team leader Dr. Laura Havrilesky said in a journal news release.
The findings support the widely held opinion that many ovarian
cancers remain in the early stages for a long time, while
advanced-stage ovarian cancers tend to spread rapidly.
More information
The U.S. National Cancer Institute has more about
ovarian cancer.