OVARIAN CANCER and US: low malignant potential

Blog Archives: Nov 2004 - present

#ovariancancers



Special items: Ovarian Cancer and Us blog best viewed in Firefox

Search This Blog

Showing posts with label low malignant potential. Show all posts
Showing posts with label low malignant potential. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

abstract: Management and prognosis of endometrioid borderline tumors of the ovary



Management and prognosis of endometrioid borderline tumors of the ovary
Source: Surgical Oncology

Background 
The Endometrioid Borderline ovarian tumor (EBOT) is the third most common histological subtype of borderline ovarian tumors. Very little is known about the prognosis and management of this entity. This paper consists of a review of the literature and an analysis of clinical series.

Study design 
A review of the literature on this topic was conducted identifying series reporting consecutive cases of EBOT using 2 search engines (MEDLINE and Pubmed). Personal data on this topic have been included and concern a series of patients treated between 1985 and 2009 for EBOT. These cases included in this series had complete data concerning patient management and follow-up >12 months.

Results 
16 patients were studied: 7 had been treated conservatively and 9 radically. All 16/16 patients had stage I disease at the initial diagnosis but one patient had also developed synchronous endometrioid adenocarcinoma of the uterine corpus. After a median time of 24 months (range, 12–132) post treatment, one (1/16) patient had developed two recurrences. She remains disease-free 42 months after the end of treatment of the last recurrence. These data were compared to the results of 4 series previously reported in the literature. In fact, the present series reports on the first recurrence in EBOT (which was an invasive lesion).

Conclusion 
Endometrioid borderline ovarian tumors carry a good prognosis. Most EBOT tumors are stage I, therefore surgical staging is not necessary in most of the cases. However, uterine curettage is required in cases of uterine preservation.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

abstract: Prognostic value of elevated preoperative serum CA125 in ovarian tumors of low malignant potential: A multinational collaborative study. (ANZGOG0801)



Prognostic value of elevated preoperative serum CA125 in ovarian tumors of low malignant potential: A multinational collaborative study. (ANZGOG0801)

Objective
Previous studies on prognostic factors in ovarian tumors of low malignant potential (LMP) were too small for robust conclusions. We examined the prognostic impact of preoperative serum CA125 ≥ 50 U/ML levels in patients diagnosed with ovarian LMP tumors in a large multinational cohort.

Methods
This retrospective study included 940 patients with ovarian LMP tumors diagnosed between 1985 and 2008 at six gynecologic cancer centers. Patients either had radical treatment (bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy) or conservative, fertility-sparing treatment. Multivariate Cox proportional hazard models were used to determine independent prognostic factors for disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS). Based on receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC), a preoperative serum CA125 level ≥ 50 U/ml was considered “elevated”.

Results
CA125 was more often elevated in serous than in mucinous tumors and in advanced FIGO stages (2 to 4) compared to stage1. DFS at 5 years was 89% and 95% in patients with elevated and normal CA125 levels. Similarly, the 5-year OS was 90% among patients with elevated CA125 compared to 95% among patients with normal levels. For both DFS and OS elevated CA125 levels and advanced stages of the disease were independent prognostic factors. Analysis of subgroups revealed that CA125 was only prognostic in serous LMP tumors.

Conclusions
In the context of serous ovarian LMP tumors, elevated preoperative serum CA125 represents a biomarker independently associated with impaired disease-free and overall survival. CA125 is available in most centers and could inform surgeons about the risk of treatment failure.

Highlights

► CA125 is a known prognostic marker in invasive epithelial ovarian cancer.
► Elevated levels are also prognostic in serous borderline ovarian cancers.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

abstract: Mucinous tumor of low malignant potential ("borderline" or "atypical proliferative" tumor) of the ovary: a study of 171 cases with the asses



Abstract

Mucinous tumors of the ovary are a continuing source of controversy in the field of gynecologic pathology. We examined a series of 171 intestinal-type mucinous tumors of low malignant potential ("borderline" or "atypical proliferative" tumors) to clarify the clinical significance of intraepithelial carcinoma (IECA) and microinvasion (area ≤ 10 mm²). The diagnosis of IECA was based on the presence of marked nuclear atypia (grade 3). Stromal microinvasion was classified as low grade and high grade (with nuclear grade 3). IECA was observed in 67 of 171 cases (39.2%). Microinvasion was identified in 31 (18.1%) cases, low grade in 22 (12.9%) cases, and high grade in 9 (5.3%) cases. Follow-up status was known in 144 cases and tumor recurrence was observed in 6 patients (4.2%). The risk factors for recurrence included International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage ≥ IC (P=0.002), microinvasion (P=0.013), age less than 45 years (P=0.032), and IECA (P=0.042). The amount of IECA ≥ 10% was also associated with the risk of recurrence (P=0.007). Among tumors with microinvasion, there was no significant association between the clinicopathologic variables and recurrence. When considering tumors with stage ≥ IC, tumor recurrence was significantly associated with IECA ≥ 10% (P=0.031) and age less than 45 years (P=0.047). It is important that mucinous tumors of low malignant potential should be staged and be optimally sampled for pathologic examination to document the status of the external surface or peritoneal involvement and to identify the worst degree of epithelial proliferation. Tumor stage ≥ IC, IECA ≥ 10%, microinvasion, and age less than 45 years were the features that were associated with tumor recurrence.
The study results also support the use of nuclear grade 3 as the sole criterion of IECA.