| Literature DB >> 31699129 |
Krzysztof Gałczyński1,2, Maciej Jóźwik3, Dorota Lewkowicz4, Anna Semczuk-Sikora5, Andrzej Semczuk6.
Abstract
Young girls before menarche or menstruating adolescent women may experience long-term drug-resistant chronic pelvic pain, as well as other symptoms associated with pelvic mass. In such cases, it is of great importance to consider ovarian endometrioma in the differential diagnosis. In general, endometrioma is recognized as an ovarian cyst. However, in most cases, the pathology represents pseudocyst with a partial or complete endometrial-like lining with extraovarian adhesions and endometriotic implants which are likely to occur at the sites of ovarian adhesions and at the ceiling of the ovarian fossa. Ovarian endometriomas occur in 17-44% patients with endometriosis and account for 35% of all benign ovarian cysts. The time span from the onset of menarche to the time of endometrioma formation, which requires surgical intervention, has been evaluated to be a minimum of 4 years. The pathogenesis of early-life endometrioma may be different from other types of endometriosis. Diagnosis is often delayed, especially in adolescents, who tend to wait too long before seeking professional help. The three specific aims of treatment in adolescents with endometriosis and endometriomas are control of symptoms, prevention of further progression of the disease as well as preservation of fertility. Increasing evidence demonstrates association between ovarian endometriosis and ovarian cancer. In the present mini-review, we draw the particular attention of clinicians to such a possibility, even if relatively infrequently reported.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescen; Adolescence; Endometrioma; Endometriosis; Ovarian cyst
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31699129 PMCID: PMC6839067 DOI: 10.1186/s13048-019-0582-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ovarian Res ISSN: 1757-2215 Impact factor: 4.234
Fig. 1a, b Typical histopathological images of the wall of endometrioma – sample collected during laparoscopic cyst enucleation at a 20-years-old woman (100x and 200x magnification, respectively)
Studies on ovarian endometriomas in adolescents published to date
| Authors | Patient age | Presentation | Symptoms | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wright and Laufer, 2010 [ | 18 | On US and CT: huge pelvic mass of 35 cm in diameter, with solid and cystic components, ascites present. On surgery: large right and left ovarian masses with adhesions to the omentum, pelvic sidewalls, fallopian tubes, and uterus, the combined contents were ~ 8 L of chocolate-brown fluid. | No symptoms, regular menses, no dysmenorrhea, mild hydroureter and hydronephrosis, CA125 = 379.0 U/mL, LDH = 245.0 IU/L. | Laparotomy, enucleation of the cyst in one ovary, drainage of that in the other. |
| Gogacz et al., 2012 [ | 11 | On US, a well encapsulated tumor (capsule approximately 3 mm thick) with homogeneous content, located behind the uterus. On surgery, a left ovarian cyst located in the Douglas pouch, containing chocolate-brown fluid, with numerous adhesions to the peritoneum and intestine. | Premenarcheal vomiting, severe hypogastric pain. | Laparotomy, enucleation of the cyst. |
| Lee et al., 2013 [ | Mean age = 19.2 ± 1 ys ( | Bilateral cysts in 49% of cases, located in the right or left ovary in 20 and 31%, respectively. Cul-de-sac obliteration in 57%. | Pain in 77% of cases, incidental in 23% of cases | Laparoscopy, enucleation of the cysts. |
| Lee et al., 2017 [ | Mean age = 19.1 ± 1.2 ys ( | Mean cyst size 75 ± 29 mm, bilateral in 21% of cases, located in the right or left ovary in 42.9 and 36.2%, respectively. Complete or partial cul-de-sac obliteration in 14.3 and 32.4%, respectively. | Dysmenorrhea in 40.5% of cases, pelvic pain in 18.8%, gastrointestinal symptoms in 6%, mass effect in 18.8%, incidental detection of endometrioma in 9.4%. | Laparoscopy, enucleation of the cysts. |
CA 125 – cancer antigen 125 concentration in serum, LDH – lactate dehydrogenase activity in serum
Main features of endometrioma images on US and MRI examinations [27, 44]
| Technique | Endometrioma Image | Suspicion of malignant transformation |
|---|---|---|
| US | Unilocular or multilocular (less than 5 locules) cysts. Homogenous low-level echogenicity (ground glass echogenicity). Poor or no vascularization. Presence of diffuse low-level echoes. Multilocularity of hyperechoic foci in the wall. Blot clots or fibrin adjacent to the cyst wall forming papillations (no vascularisation inside). Thin septa in large endometriomas. | Anechoic thin-walled cyst with echogenic vegetation or focal wall nodularity (blood clots or fibrosis due to recurrent hemorrhage can mimick these findings). |
| MRI | Specific sign – shading (caused by old blood products containing high levels of iron and protein). Higher T1, lower T2 signal intensities than in hemorrhagic cysts. Shortening of T1 and T2 secondary to high protein concentration and increased viscosity. Bilateral and multifocal lesions. | Cystic mass containing mural nodules and hemorrhagic fluid. Enhancing mural nodules within endometrioma on T1 W1 is highly suggestive of malignancy. Absence of characteristic T2-weighted “shading” which disappears in malignant tumor. |
US Ultrasound, MRI Magnetic Resonance Imaging