| Literature DB >> 26170722 |
Mary Ellen Pavone1, Brianna M Lyttle2.
Abstract
Endometriosis is a benign gynecological condition characterized by specific histological, molecular, and clinical findings. It affects 5%-10% of premenopausal women, is a cause of infertility, and has been implicated as a precursor for certain types of ovarian cancer. Advances in technology, primarily the ability for whole genome sequencing, have led to the discovery of new mutations and a better understanding of the function of previously identified genes and pathways associated with endometriosis associated ovarian cancers (EAOCs) that include PTEN, CTNNB1 (β-catenin), KRAS, microsatellite instability, ARID1A, and the unique role of inflammation in the development of EAOC. Clinically, EAOCs are associated with a younger age at diagnosis, lower stage and grade of tumor, and are more likely to occur in premenopausal women when compared with other ovarian cancers. A shift from screening strategies adopted to prevent EAOCs has resulted in new recommendations for clinical practice by national and international governing bodies. In this paper, we review the common histologic and molecular characteristics of endometriosis and ovarian cancer, risks associated with EAOCs, clinical challenges and give recommendations for providers.Entities:
Keywords: clinical; inflammation; molecular; pathways; premenopausal
Year: 2015 PMID: 26170722 PMCID: PMC4494101 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S66824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Clinical studies
| Study (Year) | Study type | Sample size | Indication | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kwon et al | Cost-effectiveness analysis | N/A | Cost analysis of opportunistic salpingectomy for ovarian cancer prevention | Salpingectomy can be an effective and cost-efficient strategy for prevention of ovarian cancer |
| Kondi-Pafiti et al | Case control | 17 | Investigation of clinical features associated with patients who have endometriosis and ovarian cancer | Clear-cell and endometrioid carcinomas presented earlier than serous carcinoma when associated with endometriosis |
| Wang et al | Case control | 226 | Explore differences between women with EAOC and typical epithelial ovarian cancer | Compared with non-EAOC, epithelial ovarian cancer plus endometriosis associated with: 1) younger age and premenopausal at time of diagnosis; 2) lower preoperative CA125; 3) earlier stage at identification; and 4) clear-cell and endometrioid carcinoma |
| Noli et al | Case control | 113 | Assess survival patterns of patients with endometriosis plus ovarian cancer | Ovarian cancer plus endometriosis associated diagnosed at earlier stage; no association with survival |
| Qiu et al | Case control | 226 | Evaluate association between ovarian cancer and benign gynecologic conditions | Endometriosis is associated with clear-cell and endometrioid carcinomas |
| Kumar et al | Case control | 126 | Assessment of prognosis of ovarian cancer arising in endometriosis | EAOCs have better survival likely due to earlier stage and grade at diagnosis |
| Davis et al | Case control | 201 | Comparisons of clinical and treatment outcomes in EAOCs and papillary serous tumors | EAOCs had higher rates of concurrent endometrial cancer and lower rate of recurrence but no difference in overall survival |
| Lim et al | Retrospective cross-sectional | 221 | Investigation of clinical features of endometrioid ovarian cancer and coexistence of endometriosis | Dysmenorrhea and dyspareunia associated with both endometrioid ovarian cancer and endometriosis |
| Mangili et al | Case control | 65 | Investigation of clinical and histologic features of EAOC subtype endometrioid | Endometrioid subtypes of EAOC were associated with younger age, earlier stage, and higher rates of concurrent endometrial cancer at diagnosis |
| Boyraz et al | Case control | 1,086 | Evaluation of association between endometriosis and ovarian cancer | Ovarian cancer plus endometriosis associated with different histological subtypes, earlier presentation, and more favorable outcomes |
Abbreviations: EAOCs, endometriosis associated ovarian cancers; N/A, not available.
Laboratory studies
| Study (Year) | Sample size | Indication | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Suryawanshi et al | 120 | Identification of genes and pathways involved in the inflammatory immunomodulation of endometriosis and EAOC | Complement pathways are prominently involved in both endometriosis and EAOCs |
| Wiegand et al | 665 | Identification of genes involved in pathogenesis of endometriosis to EAOC | |
| Govatati et al | 1,252 | Assessment of | |
| Yamamoto et al | 79 | PIK3CA mutations and transformation of endometriosis to EAOCs | PIK3CA mutation is an early event in the transformation of endometriosis to EAOCs |
| Rechsteiner et al | 142 | Assessment of mutational profile of EAOC with focus on | |
| Nodin et al | 163 | Prognostic significance of | |
| Jones et al | 8 | Exploration of the genetics of ovarian clear-cell cancer | Frequent mutations in |
| Mao et al | 246 | Assessment of | |
| Jones et al | 759 | Assessment of | |
| Guan et al | 75 | Assessment of | |
| Burney et al | 4 | Identification of differences in miRNA profiling of normal endometrium versus endometrium of women with endometriosis | MiR-9 was downregulated in endometrial tissue of women with endometriosis versus healthy individuals |
| Huang et al | 68 | Attempt to correlate loss of | |
| McConechy et al | 306 | Comparison of gene mutation frequencies in endometrial endometrioid and ovarian endometrioid carcinomas | |
| Liang et al | Unknown | Investigation of activation and inhibition of Wnt/β-catenin pathway in eutopic endometrium | Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway involved in adhesion and invasion of eutopic endometrium in murine model |
| Matsuzaki and Darcha | 70 | Investigation of Wnt/β-catenin pathway in endometriosis associated fibrosis in murine model | Activation of pathway with recombinant Wnt led to prevention of progression of fibrosis |
| Suryawanshi et al | 68 | Evaluation of miRNAs as biomarkers for endometriosis and EAOC | miRNA expression patterns may serve as diagnostic biomarkers for discrimination of endometriosis and EAOC |
| Segev et al | 917 | Investigation of risk factors between miRNA instability and ovarian cancers | No differences found in high versus low miRNA instability across ovarian cancer subtypes |
| Alves et al | 24 | Investigation of miRNA patterns, instability, and correlation with histology of ovarian cancer | miRNA instability is less common than other mutations in ovarian cancer |
Abbreviations: EAOCs, endometriosis associated ovarian cancers; miRNA, microRNA.