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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsLandmark UBC Study Confirms Dramatic Ovarian Cancer Risk Reduction
A groundbreaking study led by researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC) has provided the strongest evidence yet that a simple surgical add-on can slash the risk of the deadliest form of ovarian cancer by nearly 80 percent. Published on February 2, 2026, in JAMA Network Open, the research analyzed population-level data from British Columbia, revealing that opportunistic bilateral salpingectomy (OBS)—the proactive removal of the fallopian tubes during routine gynecological procedures—reduces the incidence of high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC), which accounts for about 70 percent of all ovarian cancer cases.
This cohort study compared over 40,000 women who underwent OBS with a similar-sized comparator group who did not have their tubes removed. The hazard ratio for serous ovarian cancer was 0.22 (95% CI, 0.05-0.95), translating to a 78 percent risk reduction. In rare instances where ovarian cancer developed post-OBS, the tumors were less aggressive, with HGSC comprising only 23 percent of cases compared to 68 percent historically.
Ovarian cancer remains a major health challenge in Canada, with an estimated 3,100 new diagnoses and 2,000 deaths annually. The five-year survival rate hovers around 44 percent, largely due to late detection as no reliable screening exists. HGSC, the most lethal subtype, often originates in the fimbriated end of the fallopian tubes rather than the ovaries themselves—a paradigm shift driven by Canadian research over the past two decades.
Understanding Opportunistic Salpingectomy: A Preventive Powerhouse
Opportunistic salpingectomy, often abbreviated as OBS or OS, involves the complete removal of both fallopian tubes (salpingectomy) during surgeries already planned for other reasons, such as hysterectomy for benign conditions or tubal ligation for permanent contraception. Unlike prophylactic oophorectomy (ovary removal), which induces surgical menopause and its associated risks like cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis, OBS preserves ovarian function and hormone production.
The procedure adds minimal time—typically 15-30 minutes—and incurs no extra recovery challenges or complications. In British Columbia, OBS uptake reached 80 percent of eligible hysterectomies and tubal ligations by recent years, demonstrating its feasibility in real-world practice.

The Evolutionary Science: From Tube to Tumor
The foundation of OBS traces back to discoveries in the early 2000s by UBC pathologist Dr. David Huntsman and colleagues, who identified precancerous lesions (serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas, or STICs) in the fallopian tubes of women at high genetic risk for ovarian cancer, such as BRCA1/2 mutation carriers. These STICs were the precursors to HGSC, upending the long-held belief that ovarian surface epithelium was the primary origin.
Step-by-step, cells from the tube's fimbriae shed, implant on the ovary, and evolve into invasive HGSC. This 'tubal theory' prompted preventive strategies targeting the tubes first. Early studies in high-risk women showed tube removal reduced risk by 80-95 percent without ovaries, paving the way for opportunistic application in average-risk populations.
Canada's leadership amplified this: In 2010, BC Cancer became the first health authority worldwide to recommend salpingectomy over tubal ligation or partial tube removal during benign surgeries, a policy co-developed by Dr. Dianne Miller.
Dissecting the JAMA Study: Methods and Rigorous Analysis
The UBC-led study employed a retrospective cohort design using comprehensive BC health databases, including the BC Cancer Registry and Discharge Abstract Database, covering 2008-2020. Researchers identified 40,527 individuals undergoing OBS (median follow-up 4.72 years) and 45,296 comparators (median 8.45 years). Adjustments accounted for age, oral contraceptive use, and other confounders.
Key endpoint: incidence of serous ovarian carcinoma. Results showed profound protection against HGSC. A secondary analysis pooled international pathology data from 26 post-OBS ovarian cancers, confirming a shift away from HGSC (P < .001).
Photo by Abdulai Sayni on Unsplash
- Hazard ratio for serous OC: 0.22 (78% reduction)
- No increased breast cancer risk (HR 0.99), validating no major selection bias
- Post-OBS HGSC rate: 23.1% vs. historical 68.1%
Pioneering Minds at UBC: The Research Architects
Co-senior authors Dr. Gillian Hanley, Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at UBC, and Dr. David Huntsman, Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology at UBC and Distinguished Scientist at BC Cancer, spearheaded the analysis. Dr. Hanley stated, “This study clearly demonstrates that removing the fallopian tubes as an add-on during routine surgery can help prevent the most lethal type of ovarian cancer.”
Dr. Dianne Miller, Associate Professor Emerita at UBC and a gynecologic oncologist, coined 'opportunistic salpingectomy' and co-founded OVCARE, BC's multidisciplinary ovarian cancer research program. Dr. Jessica McAlpine, also from UBC, contributed pathology expertise. Their collaborative work exemplifies how university-based teams drive translational research from bench to policy.Faculty positions in gynecologic oncology at institutions like UBC offer opportunities for researchers passionate about cancer prevention.
For more on academic careers in this field, explore research jobs or professor jobs across Canada via AcademicJobs.ca.
From BC Policy to Global Guideline: A Decade of Momentum
British Columbia's 2010 recommendation marked a turning point, followed by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC) in 2015. Today, 24 countries endorse OBS, with expansions to general surgery, urology, and colorectal procedures. Cost-effectiveness studies project up to 40 percent ovarian cancer reduction if universally adopted during appropriate surgeries.
In BC, OBS has prevented numerous cases, with population-level drops in HGSC incidence. Dr. Huntsman noted, “The impact of OS that we report is even greater than we expected.” This evolution highlights higher education's role in evidence-based public health.
Real-World Impacts: Lives Saved and Perspectives Shared
Patients report high satisfaction with OBS, appreciating preserved fertility hormones. One Nanaimo physician champions its expansion beyond gynecology. Ovarian Cancer Canada highlights the 80 percent risk drop for HGSC post-tube removal.
Stakeholders, including pathologists worldwide, validated findings via anonymized data. For average-risk women finished childbearing, OBS offers actionable prevention amid no screening options.

Challenges, Limitations, and Future Horizons
While compelling, the study notes shorter follow-up for OBS (younger patients) and small event numbers. Ongoing trials like NRG-CC008 assess long-term OBS vs. oophorectomy in high-risk groups. Future research explores genetic markers for personalized prevention.
UBC's OVCARE continues subtype-specific studies, molecular profiling, and trials. Higher ed institutions foster such innovation; aspiring academics can find career advice and postdoc opportunities.
Globally, broader adoption could avert thousands of cases yearly, underscoring Canadian research's ripple effect.
Photo by Logan Voss on Unsplash
Empowering Prevention: Actionable Insights for Clinicians and Patients
Discuss OBS during eligible surgeries: hysterectomies, sterilizations, cesareans. Educate on benefits—no menopause acceleration, low regret rates. For researchers, this underscores interdisciplinary collaboration in universities.
- Benefits: 78% HGSC risk cut, cost-saving, ovary-sparing
- Risks: Minimal added operative time/complications
- Comparisons: Superior to ligation for prevention
Consult guidelines from SOGC or ACOG. Track progress via higher ed career advice resources.
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