| Literature DB >> 27882234 |
Rie Miura1, Yoshihito Yokoyama1, Tatsuhiko Shigeto1, Masayuki Futagami1, Hideki Mizunuma1, Akira Kurose2, Kazushi Tsuruga3, Shinya Sasaki3, Kiminori Terui3, Etsuro Ito3.
Abstract
WAGR syndrome is caused by an 11p13 deletion and includes Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary anomalies and mental retardation. We encountered a case of a dysgerminoma originating in an ectopic ovary in a woman with WAGR syndrome. Our patient was a 24-year-old nulliparous woman who was diagnosed with WAGR syndrome. The patient had undergone left nephrectomy for a Wilms' tumor and postoperative chemotherapy at the age of 7 months. She also had a history of glaucoma surgery in both eyes, and was followed up at the Department of Pediatrics for diabetes mellitus, hypertension, liver dysfunction and hyperuricemia. The patient was investigated for oliguria and had elevated levels of blood urea nitrogen (45 mg/dl) and creatinine (5.4 mg/dl); she was admitted to the hospital with acute renal failure and a computed tomography scan revealed a pelvic tumor with a long axis of 10 cm that was obstructing the right ureter. Following insertion of a ureteral stent, the tumor was removed. The tumor had developed in the retroperitoneal space independent of the ovaries. The right adnexa were normal. The tumor was histopathologically diagnosed as dysgerminoma. Follicles were found in part of the tumor; it was thus hypothesized that the tumor developed from an ectopic ovary. The patient was administered etoposide after surgery, and has been recurrence-free for 4 years since treatment.Entities:
Keywords: WAGR syndrome; dysgerminoma; ectopic ovary; etoposide; surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 27882234 PMCID: PMC5103847 DOI: 10.3892/mco.2016.1004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Clin Oncol ISSN: 2049-9450
Figure 1.(A) A computed tomography scan revealed a solid mass with mild contrast enhancement that was heterogeneous. (B) A magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed a mixture of mildly hypointense areas with some hyperintensity on T2-weighted images.
Figure 2.Intraoperatively (A) the left and right ovaries were normal; (B) the tumor was located in the retroperitoneal space behind the right ovary.
Figure 3.Resected specimen. The resected mass was solid and appeared whitish on cross sections.
Figure 4.On histological examination, lymph node invasion from semicircular tumor cells with large semicircular nuclei. Large tumor cells and small mature lymphocytes were observed.
Figure 5.On immunohistochemical staining, the tumor cells stained positive for C-kit and Oct3, but negative for α-inhibin. Furthermore, 60% of the tumor cells stained positive for Ki-67.
Figure 6.Normal ovarian follicle identified in the tumor.