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Distribution and prognostic role of BRCA status in elderly ovarian cancer patients.

Authors :
Tortorella, Lucia
Cappuccio, Serena
Giannarelli, Diana
Nero, Camilla
Marchetti, Claudia
Gallotta, Valerio
Costantini, Barbara
Pasciuto, Tina
Minucci, Angelo
Fagotti, Anna
Scambia, Giovanni
Source :
Gynecologic Oncology. Mar2024, Vol. 182, p57-62. 6p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In the era of target therapy and personalized medicine, BRCA mutational status has a major influence on survival in ovarian cancer patients. Our aim is to verify if the poorer prognosis of elderly ovarian cancer patients can be related to the biology of the tumor beyond their own morbidities and/or suboptimal treatments. This is a retrospective single-institution study evaluating prognosis of patients with a diagnosis of ovarian cancer and known BRCA status. We collected clinical and surgical characteristics and the distribution of BRCA mutational status according to age groups. 1840 patients were included in the analysis. The rate of BRCA mutated decreased over age-range from 49.7% in patients aged <50 years to 18.8% in ≥80 years old women. The prognostic role of BRCA status on survival is maintained when focusing on the elderly population, with improved Disease Free Survival (27.2 months vs 16.5 months for BRCA mutated and wild type respectively, p = 0.001) and Cancer Specific Survival (117.6 months vs 43.1 months for BRCA mutated and wild type respectively, p = 0.001) for BRCAmut compared to BRCAwt patients. In the multivariable analysis, among elderly women, upfront surgery and BRCA mutation are independent factors affecting survival. Elderly patients experiment a poorer prognosis due to multiple factors that include both their medical condition and comorbidities, under-treatment and most importantly disease characteristics. We found that beyond disparities, BRCA mutation is still the strongest independent prognostic factor affecting both the risk of recurrence and death due to disease. • The rate of BRCA mutated tumors decreases with age. • Tumor biology in elderly patients could be a crucial determinant of treatment. • BRCA mutation remains the strongest independent factor for survival. • Tumor biology is responsible of the worst prognosis of elderly population [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00908258
Volume :
182
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Gynecologic Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176195887
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ygyno.2023.12.022