57 min

Ep. 24 Opportunistic Salpingectomy with Dr. Rebecca Stone & Kara Long Roche BackTable OBGYN

    • Medicine

In this episode, Drs. Mark Hoffman and Amy Park invite Drs. Rebecca Stone and Kara Long Roche to speak about opportunistic salpingectomy to prevent ovarian cancer, specifically serous carcinoma.

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EARN CME

Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn free AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/i7IZlO

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SHOW NOTES

The episode begins discussing ovarian cancer as a whole and how it affects 1 in 78 women in their lifetime with high mortality rates, no screening tests, and hardly any symptoms before it becomes metastatic. Most ovarian cancers (80-90%) are epithelial, and of those, most are high grade serous carcinomas, which are very lethal.

Drs. Stone and Long Roche go on to explain how ovarian cancer is actually disseminated tubal cancer, and that there is data showing dysplasia in the fallopian tube before it turns into ovarian cancer. In fact, the fimbriated ends of the fallopian tube are very high in p53 mutations, and there is data showing a decreased risk of ovarian cancer with tubal ligation. As a result, salpingectomy can be used as primary prevention for ovarian cancer. They have been doing opportunistic salpingectomies on women already in the OR for hysterectomies, Cesarean sections, ovarian cystectomies, etc. They would like to expand it to women receiving abdominal or urologic surgeries, including hernia repairs or cholecystectomies, which would require education, training, and communication across multidisciplinary teams.

The physicians continue to discuss the impact of opportunistic salpingectomies, mentioning 2000 lives could be saved every year in addition to 0.5 billion health care dollars saved as a result. They compare it to the HPV vaccine with a number needed to treat around 1 in 300 to 1 in 500 and a risk reduction of 65% or greater.

Technically speaking, the physicians mentioned the difficulties of ensuring adequate fimbriae removal of the ovary without causing more harm; overall, data shows that if done correctly, this procedure does not result in early menopause or impaired ovarian function. They also stated there is no specific procedure code for opportunistic salpingectomy along with conflicting state laws on reimbursability for the procedure, which could affect data collection and implementation.

Finally, the episode ends with talk about the future of opportunistic salpingectomies. Data shows there is a decreased incidence of high grade serous ovarian carcinoma, but more data is needed on mortality effects. The physicians strive to educate providers and patients about the procedure while ensuring no woman becomes sterilized before she is ready. Their target population is women in their 40s who will be in the OR already, as they don’t see opportunistic salpingectomies becoming indicated for the general population soon.

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RESOURCES

Break Through Cancer Organization:
https://breakthroughcancer.org/

ACOG Guidelines:
https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2019/04/opportunistic-salpingectomy-as-a-strategy-for-epithelial-ovarian-cancer-prevention

In this episode, Drs. Mark Hoffman and Amy Park invite Drs. Rebecca Stone and Kara Long Roche to speak about opportunistic salpingectomy to prevent ovarian cancer, specifically serous carcinoma.

---

EARN CME

Reflect on how this Podcast applies to your day-to-day and earn free AMA PRA Category 1 CMEs: https://earnc.me/i7IZlO

---

SHOW NOTES

The episode begins discussing ovarian cancer as a whole and how it affects 1 in 78 women in their lifetime with high mortality rates, no screening tests, and hardly any symptoms before it becomes metastatic. Most ovarian cancers (80-90%) are epithelial, and of those, most are high grade serous carcinomas, which are very lethal.

Drs. Stone and Long Roche go on to explain how ovarian cancer is actually disseminated tubal cancer, and that there is data showing dysplasia in the fallopian tube before it turns into ovarian cancer. In fact, the fimbriated ends of the fallopian tube are very high in p53 mutations, and there is data showing a decreased risk of ovarian cancer with tubal ligation. As a result, salpingectomy can be used as primary prevention for ovarian cancer. They have been doing opportunistic salpingectomies on women already in the OR for hysterectomies, Cesarean sections, ovarian cystectomies, etc. They would like to expand it to women receiving abdominal or urologic surgeries, including hernia repairs or cholecystectomies, which would require education, training, and communication across multidisciplinary teams.

The physicians continue to discuss the impact of opportunistic salpingectomies, mentioning 2000 lives could be saved every year in addition to 0.5 billion health care dollars saved as a result. They compare it to the HPV vaccine with a number needed to treat around 1 in 300 to 1 in 500 and a risk reduction of 65% or greater.

Technically speaking, the physicians mentioned the difficulties of ensuring adequate fimbriae removal of the ovary without causing more harm; overall, data shows that if done correctly, this procedure does not result in early menopause or impaired ovarian function. They also stated there is no specific procedure code for opportunistic salpingectomy along with conflicting state laws on reimbursability for the procedure, which could affect data collection and implementation.

Finally, the episode ends with talk about the future of opportunistic salpingectomies. Data shows there is a decreased incidence of high grade serous ovarian carcinoma, but more data is needed on mortality effects. The physicians strive to educate providers and patients about the procedure while ensuring no woman becomes sterilized before she is ready. Their target population is women in their 40s who will be in the OR already, as they don’t see opportunistic salpingectomies becoming indicated for the general population soon.

---

RESOURCES

Break Through Cancer Organization:
https://breakthroughcancer.org/

ACOG Guidelines:
https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2019/04/opportunistic-salpingectomy-as-a-strategy-for-epithelial-ovarian-cancer-prevention

57 min