Ovarian Tumour Flashcards

1
Q

What is benign ovarian mass?

A

Non malignant tumor of the ovary:
Epithelial (Brenners tumor, mucinous adenoma, serous adenoma)
Sex-cord stromal tumor (fibroma, thecoma)
Germ call (mature cystic teratoma)
Endmoatrioma
Functional (follicular, luteal, haemorrhagic).

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of benign ovarian mass?

A

Largely unknown.

Endomatriomas from endometriosis. Funcitonal cyst aorund ovulation.

Cyst accidents caused by rupture, haemorrage into cyst or torsion (rotation on pedicle causing strangulaiton).

Endometriomas are linked to endometriosis.

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3
Q

What is the epidemiology of benign ovarian mass?

A

4% women cysts prior to 65.

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4
Q

What would you find in the history and exam of a benign ovarian mass?

A

Lower abdominal pain, deep dyspareunia, pressure symptoms, abdominal swelling, may be asymptomatic.

Acute accident: severe LIF pain, accompanied by vomit if torsion.

Abdomen: iliac fossa tenderness, rebound/guarding if acute

Vaginal: adenxal tenderness, palpable mass

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5
Q

What is the pathology of a benign ovarian mass?

A

Epithelial

· Serous cystadenoma: most common, thin wall, uniloculated, watery fluid, cuboidal epithelium.

· Mucinous cystadenomaL large, unilatera, multiloculed, thick fluid, mucous secreting columnar cells

· Brenner’s: rare, solid pale yellow, nests of translational epithelium.

Sex cord stromal

· Thecoma: solid yellow, lipid filled cells, oestrogen secreting

· Fibroma: solid white (can give ascites + pleural effusion à Meig’s syndrome)

Mature cystic teratoma (dermoid)

· Germ cells, ectodermal tissue (squamous epith, teeth, hair, sebaceous glands), endodermal tissue (thyroid, intestine) mesodermal tissue (cartilage). 10% bilateral.

Endometrioma

· Retention cysts due to endometriosis.

Funcitonal cysts

· Follicular: unruptures Graafian follicle, lined by granulosa cells.

· Luteal: following rupture, follicle reseals and distends with fluid – lined by luteal cells.

· Haemorragic: bleeding into one of the above functional cysts.

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6
Q

What investigations would you do for benign ovarian mass?

A

Acute presentation: proceed per acute abdomen, exclude pregnancy.

USS: diagnostic (TVS preferred)

Blood: FBC, GS (prep for theatre) tumor markers (Ca125, HCG, AFP)

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7
Q

What is the management of benign ovarian mass?

A

Simple small cyst: conservative, repeat scan in 3-6mo.

Suspect torsion or >5cm cyst: ovarian cystectomy (laproscopic or open), oopherectomy if surgical difficulty or necrosis. If suspicious appearance, oopherectomy is recommended esp if postmenopausal.

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8
Q

What are the complications/ prognosis of benign ovarian mass?

A

Cyst accident, subfertility, malignant change, oopherectomy. Surgery usually cures.

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9
Q

What is an ovarian carcinoma?

A

Malignant neoplasm of the ovary

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10
Q

What is the aetiology of an ovarian carcinoma?

A

Unknown. Increased ovulatory cyc,es. Abnormal repair of ovarian surface. BRCA1. Associatd with high age, nullparity, early M/late M, high fat diet, HPNCC.

Protective factors: children, breastfeed, OCP, hysterectomy.

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11
Q

What is the epidemiology of ovarian carcinoma?

A

Most common gynae malignancy. 1/70 lifetime risk.

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12
Q

What is the history/ exam of ovarian carcinoma?

A

Late presentation. Abdominal discomfort, distension, fatigue, wt los, pressure symptoms (urinary/GI)

General: signs of malignancy, anaemia, chachexia.

Chest: signs of mets, plural effusion. Abdominal mass, ascites, Hpmegaly. Pelvic mass.

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13
Q

What is the pathology of ovarian carcinoma?

A

Epithelial: 90%, serous cystadenocarcinoma, mucous cystadenocarcinoma, endometriod carcinoma, clear cell carcinoma.

Germ cell: 5%, dysgerminoma most common.

Sex cord stromal tumors: rarely malignant, most common granulosa cell.

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14
Q

What investigations do you do for ovarian carcinoma?

A

Bloods: FBC, UE, LFT, clotting, Tumor markers (Ca125, HCG, AFP, CEA, Ca15-3, Ca19-9).

Imaging: TVS USS, high suspicion of solid areas, septae and thickened walls. MRI for surgical plannign if required.

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15
Q

What management do you do for ovarian carcinoma?

A

· Staging laparotomy: TAH/BSO, peritoneal wash, omentectomy, peritoneal biopst, assessment of lymph nodes.

· Advanced: debulking TAH/BSO, omenectomy, reduce mets.

· Chemotherapy: platinum derivates (cis) and taxanes (palcitaxel).

· Radiotherapy for palliation.

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16
Q

What are the complications/ prognosis of ovarian carcinoma?

A

Ovarian cyst accident, metastases, surgical morbidity, chemotherapy -> BM suppress, infect, nephrotoxic platinum. Ascites, pleural effusion.

5y survival I: 90%, III15%, IV5%. Late stage presentation usually.