Practical guidance
All gynecologists are faced with ovarian tumors on a regular basis, and
the accurate preoperative diagnosis of these masses is important because
appropriate management depends on the type of tumor. Recently, the
International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) consortium published the
Assessment of Different NEoplasias in the adneXa (ADNEX) model, the
first risk model that differentiates between benign and four types of
malignant ovarian tumors: borderline, stage I cancer, stage II-IV
cancer, and secondary metastatic cancer. This approach is novel compared
to existing tools that only differentiate between benign and malignant
tumors, and therefore questions may arise on how ADNEX can be used in
clinical practice. In the present paper, we first provide an in-depth
discussion about the predictors used in ADNEX and the ability for risk
prediction with different tumor histologies. Furthermore, we formulate
suggestions about the selection and interpretation of risk cut-offs for
patient stratification and choice of appropriate clinical management.
This is illustrated with a few example patients. We cannot propose a
generally applicable algorithm with fixed cut-offs, because (as with any
risk model) this depends on the specific clinical setting in which the
model will be used. Nevertheless, this paper provides a guidance on how
the ADNEX model may be adopted into clinical practice.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.