Literature DB >> 24962632

[Mucinous ovarian neoplasms. Prognostically mostly excellent, infrequently a wolf in sheep's clothing].

S Lax1, A Staebler.   

Abstract

Mucinous ovarian neoplasms represent the second largest group of epithelial ovarian tumors after serous neoplasms, of which benign cystadenomas constitute more than 80 %. Mucinous cystadenomas and carcinomas cannot be distinguished by the clinical features or the mean age of onset of the disease. They typically occur unilaterally, are confined to the adnexae (FIGO stage I) and clinically present with non-specific abdominal symptoms or are diagnosed by chance. The mean age of disease onset is around 50 years old. The prognosis is excellent. Implants, peritoneal metastases and bilateral occurrence of ovarian mucinous neoplasms should lead to the suspicion of metastasis particularly from a gastrointestinal tumor. Neither microinvasion defined as a maximum extent of invasion of 5 mm, nor intraepithelial carcinoma characterized by high grade atypia without invasion, affect the prognosis of mucinous borderline tumors. Mucinous carcinomas typically show confluent glandular, expansile growth that leads to a labyrinth-like pattern. A destructive infiltrative or nodular growth pattern, however, should lead to the consideration of metastasis. Mural nodules that may reveal a spindle cell sarcomatous or anaplastic carcinomatous pattern occur infrequently in mucinous and do not affect the prognosis. Pax8 positivity is indicative of a primary ovarian neoplasm. In this case, however, mucinous tumors associated with teratomas may show the colonic immunoreaction pattern (CK7-/CK20+/CDX2+). The rare mucinous tumors with endocervical differentiation are now designated as seromucinous tumors and consist of two or more distinct cell types, are frequently associated with endometriosis and seem to show a molecular genetic relationship to endometrioid neoplasms.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24962632     DOI: 10.1007/s00292-014-1912-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pathologe        ISSN: 0172-8113            Impact factor:   1.011


  37 in total

1.  Ovarian atypical proliferative (borderline) mucinous tumors: gastrointestinal and seromucinous (endocervical-like) types are immunophenotypically distinctive.

Authors:  Russell Vang; Allen M Gown; Todd S Barry; Darren T Wheeler; Brigitte M Ronnett
Journal:  Int J Gynecol Pathol       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 2.762

Review 2.  Pseudomyxoma peritonei: new concepts in diagnosis, origin, nomenclature, and relationship to mucinous borderline (low malignant potential) tumors of the ovary.

Authors:  B M Ronnett; B M Shmookler; P H Sugarbaker; R J Kurman
Journal:  Anat Pathol       Date:  1997

3.  Immunohistochemical expression of CDX2 in primary ovarian mucinous tumors and metastatic mucinous carcinomas involving the ovary: comparison with CK20 and correlation with coordinate expression of CK7.

Authors:  Russell Vang; Allen M Gown; Lee-Shu-Fune Wu; Todd S Barry; Darren T Wheeler; Anna Yemelyanova; Jeffrey D Seidman; Brigitte M Ronnett
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2006-09-15       Impact factor: 7.842

4.  A comprehensive analysis of PAX8 expression in human epithelial tumors.

Authors:  Anna R Laury; Ruth Perets; Huiying Piao; Jeffrey F Krane; Justine A Barletta; Christopher French; Lucian R Chirieac; Rosina Lis; Massimo Loda; Jason L Hornick; Ronny Drapkin; Michelle S Hirsch
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 6.394

5.  Immunohistochemical evidence supporting the appendiceal origin of pseudomyxoma peritonei in women.

Authors:  B M Ronnett; B M Shmookler; M Diener-West; P H Sugarbaker; R J Kurman
Journal:  Int J Gynecol Pathol       Date:  1997-01       Impact factor: 2.762

6.  Mucinous tumors of the ovary: a clinicopathologic study of 196 borderline tumors (of intestinal type) and carcinomas, including an evaluation of 11 cases with 'pseudomyxoma peritonei'.

Authors:  K R Lee; R E Scully
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 6.394

7.  TP53 protein accumulation and gene mutation in relation to overexpression of MDM2 protein in ovarian borderline tumours and stage I carcinomas.

Authors:  H Skomedal; G B Kristensen; V M Abeler; A L Børresen-Dale; C Tropé; R Holm
Journal:  J Pathol       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 7.996

8.  Ovarian mature teratomas with mucinous epithelial neoplasms: morphologic heterogeneity and association with pseudomyxoma peritonei.

Authors:  Jesse K McKenney; Robert A Soslow; Teri A Longacre
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 6.394

9.  Distinction of primary and metastatic mucinous tumors involving the ovary: analysis of size and laterality data by primary site with reevaluation of an algorithm for tumor classification.

Authors:  Anna V Yemelyanova; Russell Vang; Kara Judson; Lee-Shu-Fune Wu; Brigitte M Ronnett
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 6.394

10.  Exploring the histogenesis of ovarian mucinous and transitional cell (Brenner) neoplasms and their relationship with Walthard cell nests: a study of 120 tumors.

Authors:  Jeffrey D Seidman; Fatemeh Khedmati
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 5.534

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  1 in total

1.  Ovarian mucinous borderline tumor with anaplastic carcinomatous nodules in adolescents.

Authors:  Mengqi Huang; Qian Lv; Jingyan Xie
Journal:  J Ovarian Res       Date:  2022-07-14       Impact factor: 5.506

  1 in total

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