Ovarian cancer screening and mortality in the UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS): a randomised controlled trial

Ian Jacobs(UNSW Sydney), Usha Menon(University College London), Andy Ryan(University College London), Aleksandra Gentry‐Maharaj(University College London), Matthew Burnell(University College London), Jatinderpal Kalsi(University College London), Nazar N. Amso(Cardiff University), Sophia Apostolidou(University College London), Elizabeth Benjamin(University College London), Derek Cruickshank(James Cook University Hospital), Danielle N Crump(University College London), Susan K Davies(University College London), Anne Dawnay(University College London), Stephen Dobbs(University of Ulster), G. Fletcher(University College London), Jeremy Ford(University College London), Keith Godfrey(Queen Elizabeth Hospital), Richard Gunu(University College London), Mariam Habib(Medical Research Council), Rachel Hallett(University College London), Jonathan Herod(Hamad Medical Corporation), Howard J. Jenkins(Royal Derby Hospital), Chloe Karpinskyj(University College London), Simon Leeson(Gwynedd Council), Sara Lewis(University College London), William R Liston(University College London), Alberto Lopes(Derriford Hospital), Tim Mould(University College Hospital), John Murdoch(St Michael's Hospital), David Oram(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Dustin J. Rabideau(Massachusetts General Hospital), Karina Reynolds(St Bartholomew's Hospital), Ian Scott(Royal Derby Hospital), Mourad W. Seif(St Mary's Hospital), Aarti Sharma(University College London), Naveena Singh(Barts Health NHS Trust), Julie Taylor(University College London), Fiona Warburton(University College London), Martin Widschwendter(University College London), Karin Williamson(Nottingham City Hospital), Robert Woolas(Queen Alexandra Hospital), Lesley Fallowfield(University of Sussex), Alistair McGuire(London School of Economics and Political Science), Stuart Campbell, Mahesh Parmar(University College London), Steven J. Skates(Harvard University)
The Lancet
December 18, 2015
Cited by 1,099Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ovarian cancer has a poor prognosis, with just 40% of patients surviving 5 years. We designed this trial to establish the effect of early detection by screening on ovarian cancer mortality. METHODS: In this randomised controlled trial, we recruited postmenopausal women aged 50-74 years from 13 centres in National Health Service Trusts in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Exclusion criteria were previous bilateral oophorectomy or ovarian malignancy, increased risk of familial ovarian cancer, and active non-ovarian malignancy. The trial management system confirmed eligibility and randomly allocated participants in blocks of 32 using computer-generated random numbers to annual multimodal screening (MMS) with serum CA125 interpreted with use of the risk of ovarian cancer algorithm, annual transvaginal ultrasound screening (USS), or no screening, in a 1:1:2 ratio. The primary outcome was death due to ovarian cancer by Dec 31, 2014, comparing MMS and USS separately with no screening, ascertained by an outcomes committee masked to randomisation group. All analyses were by modified intention to screen, excluding the small number of women we discovered after randomisation to have a bilateral oophorectomy, have ovarian cancer, or had exited the registry before recruitment. Investigators and participants were aware of screening type. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00058032. FINDINGS: Between June 1, 2001, and Oct 21, 2005, we randomly allocated 202,638 women: 50,640 (25·0%) to MMS, 50,639 (25·0%) to USS, and 101,359 (50·0%) to no screening. 202,546 (>99·9%) women were eligible for analysis: 50,624 (>99·9%) women in the MMS group, 50,623 (>99·9%) in the USS group, and 101,299 (>99·9%) in the no screening group. Screening ended on Dec 31, 2011, and included 345,570 MMS and 327,775 USS annual screening episodes. At a median follow-up of 11·1 years (IQR 10·0-12·0), we diagnosed ovarian cancer in 1282 (0·6%) women: 338 (0·7%) in the MMS group, 314 (0·6%) in the USS group, and 630 (0·6%) in the no screening group. Of these women, 148 (0·29%) women in the MMS group, 154 (0·30%) in the USS group, and 347 (0·34%) in the no screening group had died of ovarian cancer. The primary analysis using a Cox proportional hazards model gave a mortality reduction over years 0-14 of 15% (95% CI -3 to 30; p=0·10) with MMS and 11% (-7 to 27; p=0·21) with USS. The Royston-Parmar flexible parametric model showed that in the MMS group, this mortality effect was made up of 8% (-20 to 31) in years 0-7 and 23% (1-46) in years 7-14, and in the USS group, of 2% (-27 to 26) in years 0-7 and 21% (-2 to 42) in years 7-14. A prespecified analysis of death from ovarian cancer of MMS versus no screening with exclusion of prevalent cases showed significantly different death rates (p=0·021), with an overall average mortality reduction of 20% (-2 to 40) and a reduction of 8% (-27 to 43) in years 0-7 and 28% (-3 to 49) in years 7-14 in favour of MMS. INTERPRETATION: Although the mortality reduction was not significant in the primary analysis, we noted a significant mortality reduction with MMS when prevalent cases were excluded. We noted encouraging evidence of a mortality reduction in years 7-14, but further follow-up is needed before firm conclusions can be reached on the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of ovarian cancer screening. FUNDING: Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK, Department of Health, The Eve Appeal.


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