| Literature DB >> 35204394 |
Daniela Fischerova1, Tereza Indrielle-Kelly2, Andrea Burgetova3, Rosalie Jana Bennett4, Maria Gregova4, Pavel Dundr4, Ondrej Nanka5, Giulia Gambino6, Filip Frühauf1, Roman Kocian1, Martina Borcinova1, David Cibula1.
Abstract
This is a case report of a rare finding of an extragonadal yolk sac tumor in a 37-year-old patient who presented with shortness of breath and abdominal bloating. During imaging and staging surgery, the findings were strongly suggestive of an extragonadal advanced tumor presenting with peritoneal dissemination, predominantly affecting omentum, with no clear primary origin. Histology revealed an extragonadal yolk sac tumor in a pure form outside the ovaries. Lacking an obvious origin elsewhere, the tumor was highly suspected to have truly originated from the omentum. The patient underwent surgery and four cycles of chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin, etoposide, and bleomycin. One-year outpatient follow-up thereafter showed no relapse. We herein discuss a possible site of the tumor origin and its development, as well as diagnostic challenges and disease prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: biopsy; diagnostic imaging; endodermal sinus tumor; female; omentum; ovary; ultrasonography; yolk sac
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204394 PMCID: PMC8871053 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12020304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Peritoneal involvement. Ultrasound images in transverse plane demonstrating (a) peritoneal visceral implant on the right ovary and (b) omental infracolic cake extending on the visceral surface of the left ovary and uterine fundus. (c) Surgical specimen showing infracolic omentum densely adherent to the left ovary. (d) Microscopic specimen (H&E, 40×) showing tumor implant secondarily infiltrating the cortex of the right ovary; the dashed line shows the boundary between the superficial tumor implant and the ovarian cortex. (e) Omental cake is adherent to the surface of the left ovary on histotopogram without any neoplastic involvement of the ovary itself; the dashed line shows the boundary of the infracolic omental cake in adhesions to the left ovarian surface. (f) Surgical specimen of uterus and ovaries. See also Supplementary Video S1. * Follicular cyst found on the ultrasound examination (a) and in microscopic specimen (d).
Figure 2Peritoneal involvement (pelvis and abdomen). Ultrasound, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, and magnetic resonance with diffusion-weighted images demonstrating peritoneal metastases in transverse plane (unless stated otherwise): (a–d) Peritoneal visceral implant on the right non-infiltrated ovary. (e–h) Parietal isolated nodule on the right pelvic side wall and diffuse visceral peritoneal involvement on rectosigmoid. (i–l) Visceral focal nodule on the splenic surface. (m–p) Diffuse omental infiltration (omental cake). (q–x) Visceral nodules in the omental bursa and on the stomach (in sagittal plane on ultrasound). Abbreviations: n., nodule(s); MRI T1 FS Gd VIBE, T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging after intravenous gadolinium; VIBE, volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination; CECT, contrast-enhanced computed tomography; DWI, diffusion weighted imaging. Supplementary Video S1.
Figure 3Histopathology (final specimen). The specimens (a,b) at 200× g magnification demonstrate (a) papillary pattern combined with small tubopapillary endodermal sinus structure (Schiller–Duval body) in blue circle; (b) marked tubulopapillary sinusoidal structure with central vascular core in longitudinal section (Schiller–Duval body); (c,d) 400× g magnified image plus zoom of diagnostic round cystic Schiller–Duval body in a transverse section, with microcystic and papillary patterns around. The body has a central vessel surrounded by fibrous tissue, called the fibrovascular core, and it is surrounded by layers of the tumoral cells at the surface of that stalk. The structure is located in open cystic space also lined by tumoral cells. All those structures together are called a Schiller–Duval body and resemble primitive glomerulus.
Figure 4Omental tumor. (a–e) Ultrasound, magnetic resonance with diffusion-weighted images, contrast-enhanced computed tomography, and specimen demonstrating omental tumor (images in transverse plane). (a–e) Omental cake. Abbreviations: MRI T1 FS Gd VIBE, T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging after intravenous gadolinium; VIBE, volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination; CECT, contrast-enhanced computed tomography; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging.
Review of primary yolk sac tumors of the omentum. Abbreviations: CT, chemotherapy; BEP, bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin; CR, complete clinical response. * Neoadjuvant CT (chemotherapy) composed of intravenous cyclophosphamide and arterial cisplatin and doxorubicin.
| Author | Symptoms | Age at | Occurrence | Level of α-FP (ng/mL) | Preoperative Biopsy | Surgery | Chemotherapy | Follow-Up | Year of Publication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Park et al. [ | Abdominal distension | 45 | Asia | 20,250 | No | Total abdominal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, infracolic omentectomy | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 1999 |
| Xinghui et al. [ | Abdominal distension | 3 | Asia | >1210 | Yes | Omentectomy | Neoadjuvant CT * | Not | 2004 |
| Geminiani et al. [ | Abdominal pain | 46 | Europe | 21,550 | No | Hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, omentectomy, resection of bowel with terminal ileostomy. | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2005 |
| Kim et al. [ | Lower abdominal pain and distension | 37 | Asia | 2980 | No | Supracolic omentectomy, total abdominal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, multiple peritoneal biopsies, cytology, pelvic and paraaortic lymph node dissection, appendectomy | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2009 |
| Haibin et al. [ | Abdominal distension | 44 | Asia (China) | 27,612 | No | Abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and infracolic omentectomy | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2010 |
| Harano et al. [ | Abdominal distension. | 35 | Asia (Japan) | 7144 | Yes | Neoadjuvant CT (BEP) for 4 cycles + surgery (omentectomy) | Neoadjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2012 |
| Lim et al. [ | Abdominal distension | 32 | Asia | 11,577 | No | Surgery (total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, bilateral pelvic lymph nodes dissection, paraaortic lymph nodes sampling, total omentectomy, appendectomy) | Adjuvant BEP (6×) | CR | 2013 |
| Lin et al. [ | Abdominal discomfort | 58 | Asia | 2865 | No | Omentectomy | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2018 |
| Fischerova et al. Current report | Abdominal bloating, nausea and vomiting, shortness of breath | 37 | Europe (Czech Republic) | 496 | Yes | Total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-ophorectomy was performed with pelvic peritonectomy, total omentectomy, partial diaphragmatic stripping and extirpation of abdominal peritoneum | Adjuvant BEP (4×) | CR | 2022 |
CR: complete response.