abstract
Incidental Serous Tubal Intraepithelial Carcinoma and Non-Neoplastic
Conditions of the Fallopian Tubes in Grossly Normal Adnexa: A
Clinicopathologic Study of 388 Completely Embedded Cases
Serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC), the putative precursor of
the majority of extrauterine high-grade serous carcinomas, has been
reported in both high-risk women (those with a germline BRCA mutation, a
personal history of breast carcinoma, and/or family history of breast
or ovarian carcinoma) and average risk women from the general
population. We reviewed grossly normal adnexal specimens from 388
consecutive, unselected women undergoing surgery, including those with
germline BRCA mutation (37 patients), personal history of breast cancer
or family history of breast/ovarian cancer (74 patients), endometrial
cancer (175 patients), and a variety of other conditions (102 patients).
Among 111 high-risk cases and 277 non-high-risk cases, 3 STICs were
identified (0.8%), all in non-high-risk women (high risk vs. non-high
risk: P=not significant). STIC was found in 2 women with nonserous
endometrial carcinoma and 1 with complex atypical endometrial
hyperplasia. Salpingoliths (mucosal calcifications), found in 9% of
high-risk cases, and fimbrial adenofibromas in 9.9% of high-risk cases,
were significantly more common in high-risk as compared with
non-high-risk women (1.8% and 2.5%, respectively; P<0.007). Mucinous
metaplasia was found in 3.1%, salpingitis isthmica nodosa in 3.4%,
hemosiderin or pseudoxanthoma cells in 4.9%, and fibrous luminal nodules
in 4.1%. None of these latter features differed significantly in the
high-risk versus non-high-risk groups. These findings suggest a possible
association between STIC and endometrial hyperplasia and carcinoma, and
clarify the frequency of non-neoplastic tubal findings in grossly
normal fallopian tubes.
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