Literature DB >> 18753975

A comparative analysis of lymphatic vessel density in ovarian serous tumors of low malignant potential (borderline tumors) with and without lymph node involvement.

Oluwole Fadare1, Michael P Orejudos, Reena Jain, M Rajan Mariappan, Jonathan L Hecht, Idris L Renshaw, Denise Hileeto, Sa A Wang, Mohiedean Ghofrani, Sharon X Liang.   

Abstract

Lymph node involvement is seen in approximately one quarter of women with surgically staged ovarian serous tumors of low malignant potential (serous borderline tumors), and this finding apparently does not adversely impact their overall survival. To help illuminate some of the pathomechanisms underlying this novel phenomenon, in which a largely noninvasive epithelial neoplasm is able to exit its primary site and be transported to lymph nodes with such a substantial frequency, we investigated whether significant differences in lymphatic vessel density exist between ovarian serous borderline tumors that show lymph node involvement and those that do not. The lymphatic vessel density of 13 conventional ovarian serous borderline tumors (i.e. tumors without stromal microinvasion, micropapillary/cribriform areas, or invasive implants) with at least 1 positive lymph node (study group) was compared with the lymphatic vessel density of an age- and disease extent-matched control group of 13 similarly selected lymph node-negative ovarian serous borderline tumors. Lymphatic vessel density was determined by counting the total number of vascular spaces immunohistochemically stained by the lymphatic endothelium marker D2-40 in 5 consecutive microscopic fields (x20 objective, field area of 1 microscopic field, 0.95 mm) in the most vessel-dense areas and calculating the average value per microscopic field. The peritumoral lymphatic vessel density was significantly higher than the intratumoral lymphatic vessel density in both groups. However, no statistically significant differences were found between the study and control groups regarding intratumoral lymphatic vessel density (8.0 vs. 7.61; P=0.77), peritumoral lymphatic vessel density (20.33 vs. 21.0; P=0.79), or combined, that is, peritumoral plus intratumoral lymphatic vessel density (27.81 vs. 28.62; P=0.83). Our findings, in conjunction with others in the medical literature, do not support a role for tumor lymphatics in nodal metastasis in this neoplasm. We discuss the possibility that nodal deposits may represent metastatic disease from secondary tumor implants.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18753975     DOI: 10.1097/PGP.0b013e3181742d7c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Gynecol Pathol        ISSN: 0277-1691            Impact factor:   2.762


  3 in total

1.  Evaluation of microinvasion and lymph node involvement in ovarian serous borderline/atypical proliferative serous tumors: a morphologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 37 cases.

Authors:  Kruti P Maniar; Yihong Wang; Kala Visvanathan; Ie-Ming Shih; Robert J Kurman
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 6.394

Review 2.  Epithelial borderline ovarian tumor: Diagnosis and treatment strategy.

Authors:  Kimio Ushijima; Kouichiro Kawano; Naotake Tsuda; Shin Nishio; Atsumu Terada; Hiroyuki Kato; Kazuto Tasaki; Ken Matsukuma
Journal:  Obstet Gynecol Sci       Date:  2015-05-19

3.  The role of intratumoral lymphovascular density in distinguishing primary from secondary mucinous ovarian tumors.

Authors:  Bernardo Gomes de Lacerda Almeida; Carlos E Bacchi; Jesus P Carvalho; Cristiane R Ferreira; Filomena M Carvalho
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 2.365

  3 in total

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