Ovarian cancer is a killer disease.
• It is the deadliest of all gynecologic cancers and the fifth leading cause of cancer deaths among American women.

• One in 71 women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer during their lifetime.

• More than 21,000 American women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer each year.

• More than 15,000 American women died from the disease in 2008. Early detection greatly increases survival.

• Ovarian cancer is difficult to diagnose because symptoms are often subtle and easily confused with other conditions.

• When ovarian cancer is detected before it has spread beyond the ovaries, nine out of 10 women will survive for more than five years. However, only 19% of ovarian cancer cases in the United States are diagnosed at this early stage.

• Approximately 67% of ovarian cancer cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage after the cancer has spread beyond the ovaries.

• The overall five-year survival rate is approximately 46%. Learn ovarian cancer’s subtle symptoms.

• Many people do not know that ovarian cancer causes these symptoms in the majority of women who develop the disease: bloating; pelvic and abdominal pain; difficulty eating or feeling full quickly; and urinary symptoms (urgency or frequency).

• Additional symptoms may include fatigue, indigestion, back pain, pain with intercourse, constipation and menstrual irregularities.

• Research shows that 90% of women with early-stage ovarian cancer do experience symptoms. With out increased education, many women, and their doctors, will ignore or misinterpret symptoms.

• Women need to know if they may be at a higher risk for ovarian cancer, and what action to take, such as exploring whether to have a hysterectomy. Factors that increase risk include: increasing age; personal or family history of ovarian, breast or colon cancer; and never having been pregnant or given birth to a child.

• About 10 to 15 percent of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer have a hereditary tendency to develop the disease. More research is needed to develop an early detection test and a cure.

• There is no reliable and easy-to-administer early detection test for ovarian cancer (as there is for cervical cancer with a Pap test).
• Ovarian cancer research is drastically under-funded from a survival perspective. Federal appropriations for ovarian cancer research have declined in real dollars, although the death rate has remained stagnant for 30 years.

http://www.ovariancancer.org/