OVARIAN CANCER and US: endometrioid ovarian

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Showing posts with label endometrioid ovarian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endometrioid ovarian. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

paywalled - Unravelling the two entities of endometrioid ovarian cancer: A single center clinical experience



Unravelling the two entities of endometrioid ovarian cancer: A single center clinical experience



Abstract

Objective

Due to the increasing prevalence of the benign condition, ovarian carcinoma arising from endometriosis is emerging as a relevant clinical entity with an unclear biological signature. We have investigated clinical and histologic features of endometriosis-associated endometrioid ovarian cancer using an institutional retrospective database.

Methods

Patients diagnosed with endometrioid ovarian cancer at our institution were divided into two groups according to the fulfillment or not of Sampson's and Scott's criteria for the detection of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer. Clinical and histological data were reported and compared. Survival analysis was obtained using the log-rank test in an unadjusted Kaplan-Meier method. Multivariate analysis was performed using the Cox proportional hazards regression model to establish independent factors associated with endometriosis-associated endometrioid ovarian cancer and to identify predictors of survival.

Results

Patients with endometriosis-associated endometrioid ovarian cancer were significantly younger, had a lower disease stage (77% vs 38%; p = 0.003), a less prevalent high grade tumor (38% vs 82%; p = 0.002) and a higher prevalence of squamous and mucinous metaplasia

The rate of endometrial cancer diagnosis was significantly higher in women with endometriosis-associated endometrioid ovarian cancer (33%) than in other patients (11%) (p = 0.04) with a 92% concordance between ovarian and endometrial histologic tumor grade. A significant difference in survival rate could not be demonstrated between patients with or without endometriosis.

Conclusions

The analysis of a retrospective endometrioid ovarian cancer database may allow to suggest a molecular, morphological and clinical parallelism between endometrial and endometrioid ovarian cancer.

Highlights

► Endometriosis-associated endometrioid ovarian tumors possess a different biologic signature when compared to cancers not associated with the disease.
► Clinical course and molecular alterations of type I and type II endometrial tumors are similar to those detected respectively in endometriosis-associated and non-associated endometrioid ovarian tumor.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

paywalled: Breast-feeding and risk of epithelial ovarian cancer (clear cell/endometrioid)




Breast-feeding and risk of epithelial ovarian cancer

 Abstract

PURPOSE:

Evidence suggests that breast-feeding may decrease the risk of epithelial ovarian cancer but it is not clear whether there is a relationship with duration of breast-feeding, patterns of breast-feeding, or particular histological subtypes of ovarian cancer. We sought to investigate these issues in detail.

METHODS:

Data from participants in a population-based study of ovarian cancer in western Washington State, USA (2002-2007) who had had at least one birth (881 cases and 1,345 controls) were used to assess relations between patterns of breast-feeding and ovarian cancer. Logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI).

RESULTS:

Women who ever breast-fed had a 22 % reduction in risk of ovarian cancer compared with those who never breast-fed (OR = 0.78, 95% CI 0.64-0.96) and risk reduction appeared greater with longer durations of feeding per child breast-fed (OR = 0.56, 95% CI 0.32-0.98 for 18 months average duration breast-feeding versus none). Introduction of supplementary feeds did not substantially alter these effects. The overall risk reduction appeared greatest for the endometrioid and clear cell subtypes (OR per month of average breast-feeding per child breast-fed = 0.944, 95% CI 0.903-0.987).

CONCLUSIONS:

Among women who have had the opportunity to breast-feed, ever breast-feeding and increasing durations of episodes of breast-feeding for each breast-fed child are associated with a decrease in the risk of ovarian cancer independent of numbers of births, which may be strongest for the endometrioid subtype.