Ovarian Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 main pathological groups in ovary?

A

cysts

endometriosis

tumours

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2
Q

what is a follicular cyst and how does it form?

A

very common cyst which forms when ovulation doesnt occur (polycystic ovaries) = follicle doesnt rupture but grows until it becomes a cyst

it is thin walled, lined by granulosa cells and usually resolves over a few months

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3
Q

what is endometriosis?

A

presence of endometrial glands and stroma outside the uterine body

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4
Q

what 3 things may endometriosis cause?

A

pelvic inflammation

infertility

pain

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5
Q

what are the different common sites of endometriosis?

A

ovary (chocolate cyst)

pouch of douglas

peritoneal surfaces, including uterus

cervix, vulva, vagina

bladder, bowel etc

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6
Q

what is the pathogenesis, macroscopic appearance and microscopic appearance of ovarian endometriosis?

A

pathogenesis = regurgitation, metaplasia, vascular or lymphatic dissemination

macroscopic = peritoneal spots or nodules, fibrous adhesions, chocolate cysts

microscopic = endometrial glands and stroma, haemorrhage, inflammation and fibrosis

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7
Q

what are the complications of endometriosis?

A

pain

cyst formation

adhesions

infertility

ectopic pregnancy

malignancy (endometrioid carcinoma)

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8
Q

how can ovarian tumours be classified?

A

epithelial

germ cell

sex-cord / stromal

metastatic

miscellaneous

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9
Q

what are the different types of epithelial ovarian tumours (65-70% of ovarian tumours)?

A

serous

mucinous

endometrioid

clear cell

brenner

undifferentiated carcinoma

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10
Q

epithelial ovarian tumours can be categorised as benign, borderline or malignant - what is the difference between each of these?

A

benign - no cytological abnormaliites, proliferative activity absent or scant, no stromal invasion

borderline - cytological abnormalities, proliferative, no stromal invasion

malignant - stromal invasion

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11
Q

serous carcinoma has two distinct entities with different precursor lesions - what are these?

A

high grade serous carcinoma = from serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC)

low grade serous carcinoma = from serous borderline tumour

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12
Q

endometrioid and clear cell carcinoma have a strong association with what?

A

endometriosis of the ovary

*also association with lynch syndrome

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13
Q

most endometrioid carcinomas are high grade and at late stage - true or false?

A

false - usually low grade and early stage

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14
Q

how are ovarian tumours primarily diagnosed?

A

primary diagnosis often made on ascitic fluid

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15
Q

what is a brenner tumour?

A

a tumour of transitional type epithelium which is usually benign

borderline and malignant variants are rare

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16
Q

germ cell tumours make up what % of all ovarian tumours and what are they?

A

15-20%

teratoma

mature (benign, cystic) - dermoid cyst (95% of germ cells - contain hair etc)

17
Q

other then teratoma and dermoid cyst, give examples of other germ cell tumours?

A

immature teratoma

dysgerminoma

yolk sac tumour

choriocarcinoma

mixed germ cell tumour

18
Q

what is a dysgerminoma and who do they occur in?

A

most common malignant primitive germ cell tumour

1-2% of all malignant ovarian tumours

almost exclusivey children and young women, average age 22

19
Q

what are the 3 different kinds of sex cord / stromal tumours?

A

fibroma / thecoma = benign, may produce oestrogen causing uterine bleeding

granulosa cell tumour = all are potentially malignant, may be associated with oestrogenic manifestations

sertoli-leydig cell tumours = rare, may produce androgens

20
Q

where are the commonest places from ovary metastatic tumours to come from?

A

stomach, colon, breast, pancreas

*metastatic tumours must be considered in all cases, particularly when tumours are bilateral and small

21
Q

what are the different stages in ovarian cancer?

A

1A = tumour limited to one ovary

1B = tumour limited to both ovaries

1C = cancer involving ovarian surface / rupture / surgical spill / tumour in washings

2A = extension or implants on uterus / fallopian tube

2B = extension to other pelvic intraperitoneal organs

3A = retroperitoneal lymph node mets or microscopic extrapelvic peritoneal involvement

3B = macroscopic peritoneal mets beyond pelvis up to 2cm in dimension

3C = macroscopic peritoneal mets >2cm

4 = distant mets

22
Q

what different problems can occur within the fallopian tubes?

A

inflammation - salpingitis due to infection

cysts and tumours

serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma

endometriosis

ectopic pregnancy

23
Q

what does salpingitis look like histologically?

A
24
Q

what must you consier in any female of reproductive age with amennorhoea and acute hypotension or an acute abdomen?

A

ectopic pregnancy - can rupture and cause fatal haemorrhage