Transitional
cell-like growth has been reported as a morphologic variant of
endometrioid adenocarcinoma in the uterus but is not well-described in
the ovary. We report the clinicopathologic features of a series of
ovarian endometrioid adenocarcinomas with transitional cell-like
morphology, emphasizing the distinction from its mimics, including
high-grade serous carcinoma, transitional cell carcinoma, and granulosa
cell tumor. Among a cohort of 71 ovarian endometrioid adenocarcinomas
surgically staged at our institution, 10 tumors (14%) exhibited
transitional cell-like morphology. Patient age ranged from 39 to 79
years (mean, 52 y). Five tumors were stage I, 2 were stage II, and 3
stage III. The tumors ranged from 8.5 to 23 cm, and the transitional
cell-like component occupied from 5% to 90% of the overall tumor, with
the remainder being conventional endometrioid adenocarcinoma. The most
compelling findings to support that this tumor pattern represents a
morphologic variant of endometrioid adenocarcinoma are that the
transitional cell-like components (1) merged directly and seamlessly
with the conventional endometrioid component; (2) contained areas of
mature or immature squamous differentiation; (3) lacked WT1
immunoexpression; (4) lacked the characteristic p53/p16 immunophenotype
of high-grade serous carcinoma; and (5) did not appear to independently
affect patient outcome. Two patients (20%) whose tumor contained
transitional cell-like morphology died, whereas 14 patients (23%)
lacking this morphology died. Although uncommon, transitional cell-like
morphology appears to be a variant growth pattern of ovarian
endometrioid adenocarcinoma that does not affect behavior and that
should be distinguished from high-grade serous carcinoma and
conventional ovarian transitional cell carcinoma.
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