Webinar: What Women Need to Know about Ovarian Cancer

Tue, May 12, 2015
12:00pm to 1:00pm ET

Description

Mayo Clinic gynecologic cancer specialists Jamie N. Bakkum-Gamez, M.D. and John Weroha, M.D., Ph.D. discuss the signs and symptoms women should be aware of for detection of ovarian cancer, understanding treatment options, and the importance of new clinical trials. Mayo Clinic medical geneticist Myra J. Wick, M.D., Ph.D. discusses the importance of family history and genetic counseling in preventing ovarian cancer. A live question and answer session followed the presentation. You can still ask questions using the chat box to the right. Speakers include: - Jamie N. Bakkum-Gamez, M.D. - John Weroha, M.D., Ph.D. - Myra J. Wick, M.D., Ph.D. Would you like to: Request An Appointment Learn More About Ovarian Cancer

Location

Online

I have stage 4 recurring ovarian cancer. I have been treated with Chemo four 4 1/2 years after surgery. Was given 2/3 months and started treatment of HEXALEN. Is there any other treatment that you would suggest.

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Would have been nice to know this is really a closed trial for patients of Mayo only. Hope they have great success!

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I have stage 3 recurrent clear cell ovarian cancer. You mentioned carboplatin and taxol are the standard chemo treatments for ovarian cancer. Would you say they would be the same for clear cell? Thank you.

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@marcampos

For a 53 yo women with past medical history of hormone receptor breast cancer stage 1 6 months ago with BRCA 1 and 2 negative taking tamoxifene what is the risk of developing ovarian cancer and if is a recommendation profilactive oophorectomy

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Risk is likely the same as the general population of women— 1.4% lifetime risk of ovarian cancer.

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@julieserra

25 years post Stage IC, diagnosed at age 31. Just had BRCA/2 VUS. Parent testing pending. Not clear on implications for surveillance for daughters, ages27 and 29 beyond Bcps with VUS. Thoughts?

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Usually no change in recommendations based on finding of a VUS.

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@cynthiawick

Dr. Weroha: participating in clinical trials DOES cost patients $$. Insurance doesn't pay for the trial drug, true, but it may have to pay for the administration of it - even if it's not SOC. And so patients end up paying the copay for the admin. of the drug. I paid over $110 every 3 weeks for the admin. of Avastin for a trial, plus $30 for each checkup required every 6 weeks, plus parking fees and gas etc., for 22 cycles! My mother participated in a trial at NIH and although they arranged her plane flights, they didn't provide a place to stay, when she had to be near Bethesda, MD for about 3 days every month. Hotels in the area start at $200/night!

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Thank you for the comment and opportunity clarify. As you point out, clinical trials do not provide all-expenses-paid care, only access to drugs that are not considered standard of care (SOC) and could otherwise cost thousands of dollars per month (an endeavor that is not otherwise feasible). I can’t speak for how trials are conducted across the country but I can say that we make a concerted effort to identify potential charges to our patients for things that aren’t considered SOC at every level. This includes, but is not limited to, cost of scans, blood draws, extra biopsies, and extra tests (such as ECGs or gene mutation testing). If we catch potential reimbursement issues for our patients, we look for ways to get those tests covered or make the patient aware of such charges ahead of time. That said, we could miss a non-reimbursed charge. This would also be dependent on the individual insurance plans and coverage will vary. We have no control over what insurance will cover.
I also share your frustration regarding co-pays and checkup fees every time I get my own bills as a patient, not physician.
Also, I wish there were a way to get free travel. This is a significant limitation for patients wanting to get treatment at Mayo (clinical trial or not). As you can imagine, most of our patients do not live in Rochester, MN, a city of only 100,000 residents with one-third comprised of clinic employees. We don’t reimburse air/ground transportation or lodging for patients who come here for standard therapies and likewise, it wouldn’t be feasible to do this for clinical trial participants either. Because we don’t pay patients to participate in a clinical trial, reimbursement for travel/lodging could be misinterpreted as payment. However, The Hope Lodge has a free place to stay for Mayo Clinic patients getting daily treatment or those participating in a trial. Since it is supported by the American Cancer Society, there is no conflict of interest.
On a final note, Avastin is now considered a standard therapy for ovarian cancer. As such, your mother literally got a standard therapy of the future, but she got it many years before other women who did not participate in the trial. I hope to offer the same “VIP” treatment for every patient who is interested in a trial.

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@alyssabauer

What are your thoughts on the "new blood test" that is supposed to reveal which women will get ovarian cancer (out of the UK)?

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There are actually 2 long-term studies of ROCA (risk of ovarian cancer algorithm) currently ongoing in the UK. ROCA is a mathematical algorithm that uses serial CA-125 blood tests (usually every 4 months) and calculates the risk of ovarian cancer at the time of each current blood test by comparing it to each individual woman’s “baseline normal”. This test doesn’t predict which women will get ovarian cancer; it’s designed to detect ovarian cancer at an earlier stage when it is potentially more curable. One of the studies that is going on is in high risk women (BRCA carriers and others with strong family histories of ovarian cancer) and the other is in the general population of women. On May 11, 2015, early data was published on the study in the general population (Risk Algorithm Using Serial Biomarker Measurements Doubles the Number of Screen-Detected Cancers Compared With a Single-Threshold Rule in the United Kingdom Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening.
Menon U, et al. J Clin Oncol. 2015 May 11. pii: JCO.2014.59.4945).

The findings suggest that ROCA does help detect ovarian cancer better than just using a single cutoff for CA-125 (most often this cutoff is 35, but with ROCA each woman has her own cutoff). The findings are promising, but we are awaiting data that shows whether using this blood test every 4 months improves survival from ovarian cancer. That is the true test as to whether this test will make this test a standard of care for women.

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@bluhmcd

What if I didn't have my surgery at Mayo but did have my tumor profiled through Caris, could I still do the Avatar trial?

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In order to be on the Avatar trial, live cancer tissue is needed and it is taken from within the patient when she is having surgery.

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@gwenbasinger

By initial surgery for qualification for the Avatar study, do you mean surgery at initial diagnosis? I had platinum based treatment in first occurrence, 10 months NED, recurrence and now not responding to second line treatment. Am I a candidate for the Avatar study?

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The upcoming Avatar study will be open for women who are having their initial debulking surgery. Since you have already started second line therapy, we wouldn’t be able to make an Avatar for you in time to help. This process takes several months. However, there is a clinical trial open at Mayo (MC1464; clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT02283658) for women with recurrent ovarian cancer. This is a phase II study in which women with hormone receptor positive ovarian cancer are treated with everolimus and letrozole. As part of the study, an Avatar is made. The Avatar in this study is not used to predict response to other chemotherapies; it is used to better understand the response of the woman’s cancer to the study drugs—everolimus and letrozole. More details on this study can be found at: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02283658?term=MC1464&rank=1

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@alexsimon

I have BRCA 1 mutation - what age should I consider surgery? What if my family isn't complete yet - are there other options?

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NCCN guidelines recommend consideration for surgery at age 35, or when childbearing complete. If not completed with childbearing, pelvic US and ca-125 every 6 months.

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