By Bahar Gholipour, Staff Writer

Published: 08/26/2013 10:26 AM EDT on LiveScience


A new test to screen for ovarian cancer appears to detect the disease in early stages, and if confirmed in clinical trials, the test could become a routine screening for women.


In the study, researchers tested the strategy on more than 4,000 women over an 11-year period. The women underwent yearly blood tests, and the researchers recorded the levels of a protein called CA-125, which is produced by the majority of ovarian tumors[1] . Women who had sudden increases in CA-125 levels were referred to a gynecologist and were given an ultrasound.


On the basis of their ultrasound results, 10 women underwent surgery during the study period. It turned out that four women had ovarian cancers still in an early stage, and five others had ovarian tumors that were either benign, or of low malignant potential (tumors that may become cancerous, but usually do not). One woman had endometrial cancer, according to the study published today (Aug. 26) in the journal Cancer. [5 Things Women Should Know About Ovarian Cancer[2] ]


The study suggested that the testing strategy had a specificity of 99.9 percent, the researchers said, meaning that only 0.1 percent of patients without cancer would be falsely identified as having the disease.


Two women in the study turned out to have ovarian tumors that were not detected by the screening, but both were of low malignant potential, the researchers said.


"The results from our study are not practice-changing at this time; however, our findings suggest that using a longitudinal (or change over time) screening strategy may be beneficial in postmenopausal women with an average risk of developing ovarian cancer," study researcher Dr. Karen Lu, professor of gynecologic oncology at the University of Texas, said in a statement.



Despite advances in treatment, ovarian cancer remains a highly lethal disease, mainly because most women with ovarian cancer are diagnosed when the disease is at a late stage. When caught at an early stage, 75 to 90 percent of patients survive at least five years, the researchers said.


There currently are no established screening tests for ovarian cancer[3] . For a cancer screening test to be useful, it has to be sensitive enough to detect markers of the disease before symptoms manifest, while also being specific enough so that it doesn't falsely suggest cancer in people who don't have it.


Previous investigations have looked at whether measuring women's CA-125 levels might be an effective way to screen for ovarian cancer, but too often, the test has not been found to be sensitive enough to detect all cases of the disease, and at the same time has found too many false positives (women who turned out not to have cancer).


The new strategy is different because it tracks changes in each woman's levels of CA-125, instead of only looking for a CA-125 level that might be considered high based on the average of the entire population. "It's more personalized, and it also incorporates age," Lu told LiveScience.


One of the challenges to developing an effective ovarian cancer screening strategy for women in the general population is that the screening has to be highly specific, so that follow-up testing and surgery that turn out to be unnecessary are kept to a minimum.


"In breast cancer screening, when a mammogram[4] is abnormal, a biopsy is made," before anything further is done, Lu said. "But in ovarian cancer, in order to confirm cancer, an actual surgery is needed to take out the ovaries and examine them."


"In order for this method to become a screening test, it has to pass the gold standard," she said. "It has to show that in a large group of women who did the screening, there were fewer deaths from ovarian cancer[5] compared to another group who didn't get screened."


The researchers are waiting for the results of a larger, randomized study currently being conducted in the United Kingdom that uses the same screening strategy. The results are scheduled to be released by 2015.


"If the results of this study are also positive, then this will result in a change in practice," Lu said.


Email Bahar Gholipour or follow her @alterwired . Follow LiveScience @livescience , Facebook & Google+ . Original article on LiveScience .[6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11]



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  • Shannon Miller


    The most decorated American Olympic gymnast has said she <a href="http://www.lhj.com/blogs/ladieslounge/2011/09/14/olympic-gymnast-shannon-miller-on-ovarian-cancer/" target="_hplink">almost delayed getting checked</a> by her gynecologist in February of 2011, on the day her doctor found a baseball-sized tumor on one of her ovaries.

    It turned out to be a germ cell malignancy, a form of ovarian cancer <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/gymnastics/news/story?id=6158854" target="_hplink">more common in teenagers and women under 30</a>, according to ESPN.

    After having the ovary and cyst removed, Miller underwent nine weeks of chemotherapy. She told ABC in the video above that she had no symptoms, which is why she's particularly passionate about raising awareness about early detection.

    She has detailed her treatment on her health and wellness website, <a href="http://shannonmillerlifestyle.com/" target="_hplink">Shannon Miller Lifestyle</a>.




  • Coretta Scott King


    After U.S. doctors deemed her <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5180053" target="_hplink">ovarian cancer terminal</a>, the civil rights pioneer's family and friends said King sought out alternative treatment in Mexico, where she <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,1154996,00.html" target="_hplink">passed away at the age of 78</a>, in 2006.




  • Gilda Radner


    The comedic actress, famous for her 1975 to 1980 stint on "Saturday Night Live", died in 1989 from ovarian cancer. She handled the disease as only a comedian could: with humor.

    <a href="http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20115242,00.html" target="_hplink">As <em>People</em> wrote</a>:
    <blockquote>Even as she was dying, Gilda Radner went for laughs. At home, Gene Wilder remembers, she enacted her infamous "Saturday Night" character Roseanne Roseannadanna, shouting at the cancer cells invading her body, "Hey, what are you trying to do in here? Make me sick?"</blockquote>
    Her husband, actor Gene Wilder, became active in raising awareness after her death for both early detection and the need for easily accessible support systems for cancer patients, through the organization named for his wife, <a href="http://www.gildasclub.org/" target="_hplink">Gilda's Club</a>.




  • Evelyn Lauder


    A champion of breast cancer awareness, Lauder, daughter-in-law of Estee Lauder, created the Pink Ribbon campaign and the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, after her own diagnosis of breast cancer in 1989.

    While breast and ovarian cancers have been linked to the same hereditary gene, in 2007, Lauder <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/13/nyregion/evelyn-h-lauder-champion-of-breast-cancer-research-dies-at-75.html" target="_hplink">developed ovarian cancer unrelated to her breast cancer</a>, a spokeswoman for the Estee Lauder Companies told the <em>New York Times</em>.

    She died from the disease in November of 2011, at 75.




  • Jessica Tandy


    Famous for playing Blanche Dubois on Broadway and the title role in "Driving Miss Daisy," the actress <a href="http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1994-09-12/features/1994255176_1_jessica-tandy-driving-miss-miss-daisy" target="_hplink">passed away in 1994</a> at age 85 from ovarian cancer, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/bday/0607.html" target="_hplink">according to her husband, actor Hume Cronyn</a>.


    <em>Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/alan-light/2091697951/in/photostream/" target="_hplink">Alan Light</a></em>




  • Diem Brown


    While her acting credentials don't hold a candle to Broadway, a younger generation has a famous face of ovarian cancer all their own in reality star Diem Brown, of MTV's "The Real World" fame. She was <a href="http://www.glamour.com/health-fitness/2006/10/cancer-diary-diem-brown" target="_hplink">diagnosed at age 24 with stage II ovarian cancer</a>, and had one ovary, several lymph nodes and part of one of her fallopian tubes removed, <em>Glamour</em> reported.

    "I had no idea why this was happening to me," she told <em>Glamour</em> of finding out she was sick. "I'm a healthy girl: I'm a vegetarian; I don't smoke; I barely drink. I kept thinking, I have so much to do; I'm not ready to die."

    While the survival rate is much lower for women whose ovarian cancer is diagnosed in advanced stages, Brown is currently healthy, having gone on to tackle additional TV challenges with her Real World and Road Rules colleagues.




  • Patrick Dempsey


    Ovarian cancer comes back in about 70 percent of women diagnosed. That's what happened to Patrick Dempsey's mother, Amanda, in 1999. The actor helped his mother through chemotherapy then, as well as in 1996 when her disease was first caught, at stage IV.

    <a href="http://www.webmd.com/ovarian-cancer/features/patrick-dempsey-cancer-caregiver" target="_hplink">Survival rates aren't promising</a> for most advanced cases, but, according to WebMD, Amanda "seems to have beaten those odds."

    Dempsey went on to found <a href="http://www.dempseycenter.org/content/4078/Patricks_Story/" target="_hplink">The Patrick Dempsey Center for Cancer Hope & Healing</a>, dedicated to providing education, support and wellness services, according to its website.




  • Angelina Jolie


    The actress's mother, Marcheline Bertrand, died in January of 2007 at age 56, after a <a href="http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20062643,00.html" target="_hplink">7-and-a-half-year battle with ovarian cancer</a>.

    "There are no words to express what an amazing woman and mother she was," Jolie and brother James Haven told <em>People</em> in a statement. "She was our best friend."




  • Kyle MacLachlan


    The "Desperate Housewives" and "Sex and the City" actor's mother was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in the early 1980s, he told <em>People</em>, and died from it in 1986.

    "I was devastated by it and wanted to do something to help," he said. He teamed up with Callaway Golf Foundation and the Entertainment Industry Foundation in 2008 to <a href="http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20423321,00.html" target="_hplink">film a PSA</a> aimed not just at women, but men, too. "Every man has a mother, a wife, a daughter, a sister, friends," he said. "It might encourage husbands to ... take care of the women in our lives."




  • Ray Romano


    The actor's cousin Linda is an <a href="http://www.ovariancancer.org/help-spread-the-word/our-celebrity-friends/" target="_hplink">ovarian cancer survivor</a> and director of <a href="http://www.ovariancancer.org/about-us/survivors-teaching-students/" target="_hplink">Survivors Teaching Students</a>, a program aimed at teaching medical students about the symptoms of ovarian cancer.

    He filmed this short video <a href="http://www.ovariancancer.org/help-spread-the-word/our-celebrity-friends/" target="_hplink">asking viewers for their support</a> in raising awareness for the disease.




  • Eva Longoria


    Like "Desperate Housewives" co-star MacLaughlan, Longoria has also teamed up with the Entertainment Industry Foundation and the Callaway Golf Foundation to raise awareness about ovarian cancer.

    She is also a <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eva-longoria-parker" target="_hplink">supporter of the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund</a>, the leading independent, non-profit organization for advancing research, raising awareness and finding a cure for ovarian cancer in the U.S.




  • Kelly Ripa


    The TV personality, who is featured on TV ads for Electrolux, has helped <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video?id=5714650" target="_hplink">raise awareness of ovarian cancer</a>. For each participant in various initiatives, <a href="http://www.kelly-confidential.com/" target="_hplink">Electrolux donates $1 to the Ovarian Cancer Research Foundation</a>.




  • Janet Jackson


    In the December 2009 issue of <em>InStyle</em>, the singer was photographed wearing the Cartier Love Charity bracelet. For each bracelet sold, Cartier <a href="http://www.instyle.com/instyle/package/general/photos/0,,20205734_20207002_20470084,00.html" target="_hplink">donated $200 to the Ovarian Cancer National Alliance</a>.

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