Small cell carcinoma of the ovary of hypercalcemic type: a case report
Abstract
The
authors report a case of small cell carcinoma of the ovary,
hypercalcemic type (SCCOHT), in a mother and daughter and discuss the
possibility of a heritable risk.
Both mother and daughter were treated
at the same institution (Kentucky) for SCCOHT.
A 23-year-old woman presented with
hypercalcemia 4 months after giving birth to her daughter. She was
diagnosed as having SCCOHT. Despite surgery, chemotherapy, and
radiation, she died of the disease 11 months after diagnosis.
Eleven
years later, her daughter presented with a histologically and
immunophenotypically identical SCCOHT tumor. She received postoperative
chemotherapy and radiation but, eventually, relapsed and died of the
disease at 27 months after the initial diagnosis.
Small cell carcinoma
of the ovary, hypercalcemic type, is an uncommon and aggressive
malignancy that occurs in young women, which is associated with a solid
ovarian tumor and hypercalcemia. Despite aggressive multimodality
treatment, most patients die within 2 years of diagnosis. Genetic
counseling, sonographic ovarian surveillance and serum calcium
monitoring at early age, and even prophylactic oophorectomy should be
considered for surviving at-risk family members.
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