| Literature DB >> 20445756 |
Amy L Gross1, Robert J Kurman, Russell Vang, Ie-Ming Shih, Kala Visvanathan.
Abstract
The lack of proven screening tools for early detection and the high mortality of ovarian serous carcinoma (OSC), particularly high grade, have focused attention on identifying putative precursor lesions with distinct morphological and molecular characteristics. The finding of occult invasive and intraepithelial fallopian tube carcinomas in prophylactically removed specimens from asymptomatic high-risk BRCA 1/2-mutation carriers supports the notion of an origin for OSC in the fallopian tube. The intraepithelial carcinomas have been referred to as serous intraepithelial carcinomas (STICs) but our own findings (unpublished data) and recent reports have drawn attention to a spectrum of changes that fall short of STICs that we have designated serous tubal intraepithelial lesions (STILs).Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20445756 PMCID: PMC2860809 DOI: 10.1155/2010/126295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Prevalence of occult carcinoma in bilateral prophylactic salpingo-oophorectomy specimens.
| Author | Study design | Study population | Sectioning protocol | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colgan et al. 2001 [ | Cross-sectional | 60 BPSO specimens from women (mean age 48.4) with high likelihood of being BRCA mutation carriers according to family history (early criteria) or tested positive for a BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation (later criteria) | Ovaries: multiple sections through the short axis; fallopian tubes: 40/60 had representative sections only, the other 20 were completely submitted with transverse sections | 5 (8.3%) cases showed occult carcinoma; 4/5 located in fallopian tube |
| Leeper et al. 2002 [ | Cross-sectional | 30 BPSO specimens from women (mean age 46, range 30–65) at high risk of ovarian cancer according to family or personal history | Ovaries and tubes: first 7 cases had representative sections only, remaining 23 cases were serially sectioned | 5 (16.7%) cases showed occult carcinoma; 3 located in fallopian tube |
| Olivier et al. 2004 [ | Cross-sectional | 38 BPO specimens and 90 BPSO specimens from women (mean age 46, range 26–74) with known BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations or personal history of breast cancer and family history suggestive of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer | Ovaries from all procedures and tubes from BPSO procedures: sectioned in their entirety | 5 (5.6%) cases from BPSO group showed occult carcinoma (all in BRCA1 carriers); 2 restricted to the fallopian tube; no occult cancers in ovary-only specimens |
| Lamb et al. 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | 113 BPSO specimens from women (median age 47, range 30–70) at high risk for ovarian cancer based on GOG criteria | Ovaries and tubes: sectioned at 2- to 3-mm intervals | 7 (6.2%) cases showed ovarian, fallopian tube or peritoneal neoplasia; 5 were early high-grade serous tubal neoplasia |
| Finch et al. 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | 159 BPSO specimens from BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers (mean age 47.7, range 34–71) | Ovaries: serially sectioned; fallopian tubes initially representative sections—partway through protocol amended to submit tubes in entirety | 7 (4.4%) cases showed occult carcinoma; 6 involved fallopian tube |
| Medeiros et al. 2006 [ | Case-control | 13 BPSO specimens from BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation carriers (mean age 50, range 39–76) and 13 controls (mean age 58, range 43–76) undergoing surgery for benign reasons | Ovaries and tubes: sectioned at 2- to 3-mm intervals; fimbriae in some cases serially sectioned, in others by SEE-FIM protocol | 5 (38%) cases showed early cancers; all in the fallopian tube; 4/5 stained positive for both p53 and MIB-1, the 5th scored positive for MIB-1 only; no cancers were found in controls |
| Hermsen et al. 2006 [ | Case-control | 85 BPSO specimens from high-risk women according to family history or BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation status (median age 48, range 33–64) and 72 controls undergoing surgery for benign reasons (median age 37, range 23–79) | Sectioning details not specified | 1 case of tubal carcinoma + 2 cases of severe tubal dysplasia/in situ carcinoma (3.5%) were identified in the BPSO group; no cancers were found in controls |
| Callahan et al. 2007 [ | Cross-sectional | 122 BPSO specimens from women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations or variants (median age 46.5, range 23–76) | Ovaries and tubes: sectioned at 2- to 3-mm intervals for all cases; SEE-FIM protocol performed in a subset | 7 (5.7%) cases showed occult tubal carcinoma |
| Finch et al. 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | 490 BPSO specimens from women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations (mean age 47.6, range 19–76) | All reported cancers confirmed by review of medical records and/or pathology reports. The pathology reports were reviewed in order to correctly assign the diagnosis of ovarian, fallopian tube, or primary peritoneal cancer. | 11 (2.2%) specimens showed occult cancer; 7 were identified as ovarian; 3 were classified as tubal; 1 case had positive peritoneal washings with no source of cancer identified |
| Powell et al. 2005 [ | Cross-sectional | 67 BPSO specimens from women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations (mean age 47, range 31–64) | Ovaries and tubes: serially sectioned at 2 mm intervals (“full” adherence to specified protocol) in 20 cases; partial adherence in 21 cases; standard procedures (nonadherence) in 26 cases | 7 (17%) specimens that were processed by fully or partially adherent protocols ( |
BPO: bilateral prophylactic oophorectomy; BPSO: bilateral prophylactic salpingo-oophorectomy; GOG: gynecologic oncology group; SEE-FIM: sectioning and extensively examining the fimbriae.
Serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma in pelvic serous carcinoma cases.
| Author | Study design | Study population | Sectioning Protocol | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salvador et al. 2008 [ | Cross-sectional | 16 cases of epithelial ovarian malignancy with tubes submitted in toto | fallopian tubes submitted in toto and serially sectioned every 3-4 mm | 10 of the 12 cases of high-grade serous carcinoma showed either unilateral tubal mucosal involvement by TIC ( |
| Kindelberger et al. 2007 [ | Cross-sectional | 55 cases containing pelvic serous carcinoma (mean age 61.5, range 43–82) | SEE-FIM for all cases | 41(75%) showed involvement of endosalpinx; 11 were classified as tubal or peritoneal primary; (9 of these had TICs); 20/30 cases classified as ovarian had TICs; 93% of TICs involved the fimbria. Of 5 ovarian cases with TICs, p53 DNA analysis showed identical mutations in at least one focus of TIC and ovarian cancer |
| Carlson et al. 2008 [ | Cross-sectional | 45 cases of primary peritoneal serous carcinoma in which there was either nonuniform sampling of the fallopian tube ( | nonuniform sampling (portion of tube submitted), or SEE-FIM protocol | 9 (35%) of first sampling group and 9 (47%) of second samping group showed STICs. 5/5 cases tested showed identical p53 mutations in the peritoneal and tubal lesions |
FISH: fluorescence in situ hybridization; SEE-FIM: sectioning and extensively examining the fimbriae; STIC: serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma; TIC: tubal intraepithelial carcinoma.
Figure 1Serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC). (a) The morphological features of a small STIC showing papillary architecture with intraepithelial carcinoma cells, many of which are detached and are able to freely disseminate onto ovaries, pelvic, or peritoneal wall. (b) The p53 immunohistochemistry demonstrates that all intraepithelial carcinoma cells are intensely positive for p53 nuclear immunoreactivity. In contrast, the normal-appearing tubal epithelial cells flanking the STIC are negative for p53.
Figure 2Serous tubal intraepithelial lesion (STIL). (a) The morphological features of an STIL identified in a young cancer-free BRCA mutation carrier. The epithelium shows mild nuclear and architectural atypia but not to the level of a classical STIC. (b) An immunohistochemical stain for p53 shows overexpression in several consecutive secretory cells. (c) An immunohistochemical stain for Ki-67 shows a low proliferation index.