Ovarian tumor

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mikael Häggström (talk | contribs) at 11:23, 17 March 2020 (Histopathologic classification: Expanded). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Ovarian tumors, or ovarian neoplasms, are tumors arising from the ovary. They can be benign or malignant (ovarian cancer). They consists of mainly solid tissue, while ovarian cysts contain fluid.

Gross pathology of an ovarian carcinoma.

Histopathologic classification

 
Ovarian tumors by incidence and risk of ovarian cancer[1]

Ovarian tumors are classified according to the histology of the tumor, obtained in a pathology report. Histology dictates many aspects of clinical treatment, management, and prognosis.

The most common forms are:

Type Subtype Relative incidence[2] Percent malignant[2] Comments Micrograph
Germ cell tumor Mature cystic teratoma 46,0% 0,17% to 2%[3] Cystic, with elements of all 3 germ layers (endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm).[4]
 
Hair follicles.
Immature teratoma 2,5% 100,0% A teratoma that contains anaplastic immature elements, and is often synonymous with malignant teratoma.[5]  
Other germ cell tumors 3,0% Others mainly include dysgerminoma, yolk sac tumor, struma ovarii and squamous cell carcinoma arising from a dermoid cyst, and malignant mixed germ cell tumor.[2]
Surface epithelial-stromal tumor Serous tumor 25,3% 18,5% Benign serous tumors of the right ovarian cyst are thinwalled unilocular cysts that are lined by ciliated pseudostratified cuboidal or columnar epithelium.[6]
 
Histopathology of lining of a benign serous tumor of the ovary
Mucinous tumor 15,7% 8,8% Benign mucinous tumors of the ovary consist of simple, nonstratified columnar epithelium with basally-located hyperchromatic nuclei and resemble gastric foveolar epithelium.[6]  
Endometrioid tumor 1,1% 100,0%
Other surface-epithelial tumors 1,4% Others include mainly malignant mixed mullerian tumor, Brenner tumor and mixed epithelial tumor.[2]
Sex cord-stromal tumor Fibroma 1,4% 0,0%
Adult granulosa cell tumor 1,1% 100,0%
Other sex cord-stromal tumors 0,8% Others include mainly juvenile granulosa cell tumor, thecoma and sclerosing stromal tumor[2]
Secondary/metastatic) tumor 1,7% 100,0% Usually from breast cancer, colon cancer, endometrial cancer, stomach cancer or cervical cancer.[7]

Mixed tumors contain elements of more than one of the above classes of tumor histology.

References

  1. ^ - Vaidya, SA; Kc, S; Sharma, P; Vaidya, S (2014). "Spectrum of ovarian tumors in a referral hospital in Nepal". Journal of Pathology of Nepal. 4 (7): 539–543. doi:10.3126/jpn.v4i7.10295. ISSN 2091-0908.
    - Minor adjustment for mature cystic teratomas (0.17 to 2% risk of ovarian cancer): Mandal, Shramana; Badhe, Bhawana A. (2012). "Malignant Transformation in a Mature Teratoma with Metastatic Deposits in the Omentum: A Case Report". Case Reports in Pathology. 2012: 1–3. doi:10.1155/2012/568062. ISSN 2090-6781.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e Unless otherwise specified in boxes, reference is: Vaidya, SA; Kc, S; Sharma, P; Vaidya, S (2014). "Spectrum of ovarian tumors in a referral hospital in Nepal". Journal of Pathology of Nepal. 4 (7): 539–543. doi:10.3126/jpn.v4i7.10295. ISSN 2091-0908.
  3. ^ Mandal, Shramana; Badhe, Bhawana A. (2012). "Malignant Transformation in a Mature Teratoma with Metastatic Deposits in the Omentum: A Case Report". Case Reports in Pathology. 2012: 1–3. doi:10.1155/2012/568062. ISSN 2090-6781.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  4. ^ Hillary Rose Elwood. "Skin nonmelanocytic tumor - Other tumors of skin - Benign (mature) cystic teratoma". pathology Outlines. Topic Completed: 1 November 2016. Revised: 4 April 2019
  5. ^ Sun, Hang; Ding, Hongxin; Wang, Jianjun; Zhang, Emma; Fang, Yihua; Li, Zhenhua; Yu, Xiao; Wang, Chongren; Zhao, Yifan; Chen, Kan; Wen, Siwan; Li, Liang; Shan, Shan; Hong, Liu; Chen, Face; Su, Pu (2019). "The differences between gonadal and extra-gonadal malignant teratomas in both genders and the effects of chemotherapy". BMC Cancer. 19 (1). doi:10.1186/s12885-019-5598-0. ISSN 1471-2407.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  6. ^ a b Baradwan, Saeed; Alalyani, Haneen; Baradwan, Amira; Baradwan, Afnan; Al-Ghamdi, Maram; Alnemari, Jameel; Al-Jaroudi, Dania (2018). "Bilateral ovarian masses with different histopathology in each ovary". Clinical Case Reports. 6 (5): 784–787. doi:10.1002/ccr3.1466. ISSN 2050-0904.
  7. ^ Lisa Lee-Jones, University of Wales College of Medicine (2003-12-01). "Ovarian tumours : an overview". Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics in Oncology and Haematology.