Clinical studies do not validate the power of manygenomic tests developed to diagnose andguide the treatment of ovarian cancer todecrease the disease’s mortality or improvethe quality of life of patients, accordingto a report released by the Agencyfor Healthcare Research and Quality(AHRQ).
ROCKVILLE, Maryland--Clinicalstudies do not validate the power of manygenomic tests developed to diagnose andguide the treatment of ovarian cancer todecrease the disease's mortality or improvethe quality of life of patients, accordingto a report released by the Agencyfor Healthcare Research and Quality(AHRQ). The medical-literature reviewevaluated tests for single-gene products,genetic variations affecting the riskof ovarian cancer, gene expression, andproteomics.
Laboratory Data
"There are reasonable data on the clinicallaboratory performance of most radioimmunoassays,but the majority of thedata on other genomic tests comes fromresearch laboratories," the report said."Although research remains promising,adaptation of genomic tests into clinicalMany Gene-Based Ovarian Ca Tests Don't Lower Mortalitypractice must await appropriately designedand powered studies in relevantclinical settings."
Current strategies have failed to provideeffective ways to prevent and screenfor ovarian cancer. As a result, investigatorshave explored genomics and proteomicsto identify potential biomarkersthat could help reduce the morbidity andmortality of the often-fatal disease, whichstrikes more than 20,000 Americanwomen annually. Key findings from thereport include:
Based on a computer simulationmodel developed by the team, the researchersconcluded that even highly accuratescreening tests will not result in alarge drop in the ovarian cancer mortalityrate unless testing is done at intervalsof less than 1 year. Such frequent testing,however, would also yield a large numberof false-positives results.
The study, "Genomic Tests for OvarianCancer Detection and Management,"was conducted by Evan R. Myers,MD, and his colleagues at the Duke UniversityEvidence-based Practice Center,which is funded by AHRQ. It is the firstof five evidence reports to be issued aspart of a collaboration between AHRQand the Centers for Disease Control andPrevention.