A Cochrane review (abstract , review [Abstract]) 1 [withdrawn from publication] included 12 RCTs (all started before 1980) with a total of 2102 subjects. For women under 50 at entry, surgical ovarian ablation or suppression of ovarian function, sometimes with the addition of prednisone, versus no such adjuvant treatment was associated with a significantly higher 15-year survival (52.4% vs 46.1%; 6.3 fewer deaths per 100 women, p=0.001) than no ovarian ablation. For women aged 50 or more, there was no significant difference in survival.
Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by indirectness (no information on the effect of ovarian ablation in the presence of present-day treatments for breast cancer).
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