Patients 40 and younger who underwent bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and bilateral mastectomy had significantly longer overall survival.
For carriers of BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations, we've long known that bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) and bilateral mastectomy reduce cancer risk in those organs. Similarly, for patients with BRCA mutations who develop breast cancer and undergo risk-reducing BSO (RRBSO), breast cancer–related survival is improved. How about overall survival? Researchers retrospectively studied an international cohort of >5000 young patients (≤40 years) who received a diagnosis of stage I–III breast cancer from 2000 to 2020.
Patients could have undergone breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy as primary surgical therapy for the initial breast cancer. Overall, 64% of patients were BRCA1 pathogenic variant carriers, 51% had node-negative disease, and 46% had h…
Reviewing Author
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardLilly; AstraZeneca; Gilead
Grant/Research SupportBreast Cancer Research Foundation
Editorial BoardsClinical Breast Cancer; Oncology; Annals of Surgery; Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesNational Comprehensive Cancer Network (Chair, Breast Cancer Panel); American Board of Internal Medicine (Medical Oncology Board)
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardLilly; AstraZeneca; Gilead
Grant/Research SupportBreast Cancer Research Foundation
Editorial BoardsClinical Breast Cancer; Oncology; Annals of Surgery; Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
Leadership Positions in Professional SocietiesNational Comprehensive Cancer Network (Chair, Breast Cancer Panel); American Board of Internal Medicine (Medical Oncology Board)