Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Study Finds Opportunistic Salpingectomy Cuts Serous Ovarian Cancer Risk by 78%

Removing fallopian tubes during routine gynecologic procedures preserves ovarian function, fueling moves to scale up the prevention step beyond OB-GYN settings.

Overview

  • The findings were published in JAMA Network Open on February 2, 2026 by a University of British Columbia–led team.
  • Researchers analyzed health records for more than 85,000 people in British Columbia who had gynecologic surgery between 2008 and 2020, comparing those with and without the added procedure.
  • The analysis found a 78% lower incidence of serous ovarian cancer after the procedure, with rare post-procedure cancers appearing less biologically aggressive.
  • Results were supported by data from international pathology laboratories, and prior studies indicate the approach is safe, hormone-sparing, and cost-effective.
  • British Columbia reports uptake in roughly 80% of hysterectomies and tubal ligations, professional bodies in 24 countries recommend the strategy, and the province is piloting use in general and urologic surgeries.