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2002 JUN 20 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Women at highest risk for ovarian cancer receive less screening and report less worry about getting the disease than women with a lower yet somewhat elevated risk, according to researchers at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
M. Robyn Andersen, PhD, MPH, an assistant member in Fred Hutchinson's public health sciences division, and colleagues reported their findings in the journal Gynecologic Oncology.
"Women most likely to report high levels of perceived risk and to get screening for ovarian cancer are those at elevated risk who have a single relative affected with ovarian cancer, as compared with high-risk women with multiple family members affected by breast and/or ovarian cancer," Andersen said.
"These results suggest that many women need additional education about ovarian-cancer risk. We found that the majority of women overestimate their risk and yet a significant percentage of those at highest risk fail to get the recommended screening."
The findings were based on a survey of 3257 women designed to measure the relationship between perceived ovarian-cancer risk, worry, and screening use. The participants averaged 48 years of age and were well educated; nearly 70% had graduated from college.
Of those surveyed, 142 were at high risk due to a strong family history of breast or ovarian cancer and 144 women were at ...