@article{07ff19862726485f8803fe24c56424d0,
title = "Phase II trial of chemopreventive effects of levonorgestrel on ovarian and fallopian tube epithelium in women at high risk for ovarian cancer: An NRG oncology group/GOG study",
abstract = "A large body of epidemiologic evidence has shown that use of progestin-containing preparations lowers ovarian cancer risk. The purpose of the current study was to gather further preclinical evidence supporting progestins as cancer chemopreventives by demonstrating progestin-activation of surrogate endpoint biomarkers pertinent to cancer prevention in the genital tract of women at increased risk of ovarian cancer. There were 64 women enrolled in a multi-institutional randomized trial who chose to undergo risk-reducing bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) and to receive the progestin levonorgestrel or placebo for 4 to 6 weeks prior to undergoing BSO. The ovarian and fallopian tube epithelia (FTE) were compared immunohistochemically for effects of levonorgestrel on apoptosis (primary endpoint). Secondary endpoints included TGFb isoform expression, proliferation, and karyometric features of nuclear abnormality. In both the ovary and fallopian tube, levonorgestrel did not confer significant changes in apoptosis or expression of the TGFb1, 2, or 3 isoforms. In the ovarian epithelium, treatment with levonorgestrel significantly decreased the proliferation index. The mean ovarian Ki-67 value in the placebo arm was 2.027 per 100 cells versus 0.775 per 100 cells in the levonorgestrel arm (two-sided P value via Mann-Whitney U test = 0.0114). The karyometric signature of nuclei in both the ovarian and FTE deviated significantly from normal controls (women at average risk of ovarian cancer), but was significantly less abnormal in women treated with levonorgestrel. These karyometric data further support the idea that progestins may clear genetically abnormal cells and act as chemopreventive agents against ovarian and fallopian tube cancer.",
author = "Rodriguez, {Gustavo C.} and James Kauderer and Jessica Hunn and Thaete, {Larry G.} and Watkin, {William G.} and Samantha Russell and Michael Yozwiak and Jack Basil and Jean Hurteau and Shashikant Lele and Modesitt, {Susan C.} and Oliver Zivanovic and Zhang, {Hao Helen} and Bartels, {Peter H.} and Alberts, {David S.}",
note = "Funding Information: This work was supported by NCI grants to the Gynecologic Oncology Group Administrative Office (CA 27469), the Gynecologic Oncology Group Statistical and Data Center (CA 37517), the NRG Oncology SDMC (U10 CA180822), NRG Oncology Operations (U10CA 180868), and UG1CA189867 (NCI Community Oncology Research Program). The authors would like to thank Hubert Bartels for his contributions to this study. The following Gynecologic Oncology Group member institutions participated in the primary treatment studies: Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center (Columbus, OH), Evanston CCOP-NorthShore University Health System (Evanston, IL), Roswell Park Cancer Institute (Buffalo, NY), University of Virginia (Charlottesville, VA), Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (New York, NY), University of California Medical Center at Irvine-Orange Campus (Orange, CA), Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (Bethesda, MD), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (Chapel Hill, NC), Wake Forest University Health Sciences (Winston-Salem, NC), University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Froedtert and the Medical College of Wisconsin (Milwaukee, WI), Northern Indiana Cancer Research Consortium (South Bend, IN), and the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (Oklahoma City, OK). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2019 American Association for Cancer Research.",
year = "2019",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-18-0383",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "12",
pages = "401--412",
journal = "Cancer Prevention Research",
issn = "1940-6207",
publisher = "American Association for Cancer Research Inc.",
number = "6",
}