Editorial: abstract
For women with early-stage ovarian or endometrial cancers, prognosis is
very good, with overall survival for both sites between
80% and 90%. This stands in stark contrast to
metastatic disease (advanced stage), where the overall survival is less
than
15%. We have long recognized that subtypes of
disease also inform these statistics, with high-grade serous carcinomas
conferring
a far worse prognosis compared with others,
including low-grade serous or endometrioid tumors. Yet even with our
present understanding,
a not uncommon finding is the diagnosis of women
with carcinoma at both the ovary and the uterus (a situation that occurs
in up to 10% of patients), raising the question of
synchronous primaries or of metastatic disease. The implications of
these
clinical senarios are very relevant: If a
conclusion of synchronous primaries is made, then prognosis should be
excellent
and hence no further treatment beyond surgery is
required for cure. However, the finding of metastatic disease (from the
ovary
to the uterus or vice versa) will substantially
change the prognostic implications, with these patients having a higher
risk
of recurrence and death from metastatic disease. In
addition, this differential diagnosis can change therapeutic
recommendations,
with metastatic disease requiring more aggressive
adjuvant therapy. Thus, the issue is both a biologic and clinical one.
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