| Literature DB >> 24868556 |
Masafumi Koshiyama1, Noriomi Matsumura1, Ikuo Konishi1.
Abstract
Type I ovarian tumors, where precursor lesions in the ovary have clearly been described, include endometrioid, clear cell, mucinous, low grade serous, and transitional cell carcinomas, while type II tumors, where such lesions have not been described clearly and tumors may develop de novo from the tubal and/or ovarian surface epithelium, comprise high grade serous carcinomas, undifferentiated carcinomas, and carcinosarcomas. The carcinogenesis of endometrioid and clear cell carcinoma (CCC) arising from endometriotic cysts is significantly influenced by the free iron concentration, which is associated with cancer development through the induction of persistent oxidative stress. A subset of mucinous carcinomas develop in association with ovarian teratomas; however, the majority of these tumors do not harbor any teratomatous component. Other theories of their origin include mucinous metaplasia of surface epithelial inclusions, endometriosis, and Brenner tumors. Low grade serous carcinomas are thought to evolve in a stepwise fashion from benign serous cystadenoma to a serous borderline tumor (SBT). With regard to high grade serous carcinoma, the serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STICs) of the junction of the fallopian tube epithelium with the mesothelium of the tubal serosa, termed the "tubal peritoneal junction" (TPJ), undergo malignant transformation due to their location, and metastasize to the nearby ovary and surrounding pelvic peritoneum. Other theories of their origin include the ovarian hilum cells.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24868556 PMCID: PMC4017729 DOI: 10.1155/2014/934261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Summary of clinicopathological features and molecular genetic alterations of two types of ovarian carcinoma.
| Type I tumors | Type II tumors | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Behavior | Indolent | Aggressive | ||
| At the time of the diagnosis | Early stage | Advanced stage | ||
| Survival rate at 5 years | About 55% | About 30% | ||
| Histological type/Precursors | ||||
| Endometrioid carcinoma/ | Endometriosis | High grade serous/ | Probably | |
| Clear cell carcinoma/ | Endometriosis | ovarian surface epithelium; SCOUT→ | ||
| Mucinous carcinoma/ | Mucinous Cystadenoma, Endometriosis | P53 signature→STIL/TILT→STIC | ||
| Teratoma, Brenner Tumor, and MBT | or ovarian hilum stem cell | |||
| Low grade serous carcinoma/ | Serous cystadenoma, Adenofibroma | Undifferentiated carcinoma/ | ? | |
| Atypical proliferative serous tumor (SBT) | Carcinosarcoma/ | ? | ||
| Müllerian epithelial cyst | ||||
| Transitional cell carcinoma/ | Brenner tumor | |||
| Gene expression profile | ||||
| Genetic instability | Not very unstable | Very unstable | ||
| PTEN mutation | 15–20% | Low | ||
| HNF-1 beta | 90% | Low | ||
| ARID1A mutation | 40–50% | Not found | ||
| CTNNB1 mutation | 30% | Low | ||
| PIK3CA | 20% | Low | ||
| Microsatellite | 50% | 8–28% | ||
| KRAS mutation | 30–65% | Low | ||
| BRAF mutation | 30–65% | Low | ||
| TP53 mutation | Low | 50–80% | ||
| HER2/neu | Low | 20–67% | ||
| AKT overexpression | Low | 12–30% | ||
| p16 inactivation | Low | 15% | ||
| HLA-G | Low | 61% | ||
| APO E | 12% | 66% | ||
| BRCA 1/BRCA2 | Low | High | ||
| Ki67 proliferation | 10–15% | 50–75% | ||