Microscopic Benign and Invasive Malignant Neoplasms and a Cancer-Prone Phenotype in Prophylactic Oophorectomies

Background The occurrence of approximately 5% of common epithelial malignant tumors of the ovary can be traced to inheritance of risk. One prohylactic strategy to decrease the probability of development of disease in individuals within families where this mendelian-dominant pattern of occurrence is...

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Veröffentlicht in:JNCI : Journal of the National Cancer Institute 1996-12, Vol.88 (24), p.1810-1820
Hauptverfasser: Salazar, Hernando, Godwin, Andrew K., Daly, Mary B., Laub, Paul B., Hogan, W. Michael, Rosenblum, Norman, Boente, Matthew P., Lynch, Henry T., Hamilton, Thomas C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The occurrence of approximately 5% of common epithelial malignant tumors of the ovary can be traced to inheritance of risk. One prohylactic strategy to decrease the probability of development of disease in individuals within families where this mendelian-dominant pattern of occurrence is apparent is to remove the ovaries of individuals at risk for ovarian cancer. The procedure, when done for this purpose, is recommended soon after completion of childbearing. Purpose Our goal was to compare the histologic features of the ovaries of women at increased risk for ovarian cancer to those at no known increased risk for the disease. Methods Ovaries removed for prophylaxis from 20 women considered to be at increased risk for developing ovarian cancer were examined histologically. During the course of this work, it seemed apparent that these ovaries contained numerous atypical features compared with the expected appearance of normal ovaries. Hence, we expanded the study to include a control group whose ovaries were removed for reasons unrelated to cancer. The study, therefore, was not blinded. The increased risk in the cancer-prone individuals was determined by family history, specifically the presence of at least one first-degree relative and one second-degree relative with ovarian and/or breast cancer and positive linkage or mutational analysis of BRCA1 in some. The difference in mean ages of patients in the control and high-risk groups was not statistically significant. The difference among both groups with respect to the number of atypical features as well as the intensity of those features was ascertained by computing probabilities using Fisher's exact test (two-sided) for rows × columns contingency tables. Results Two unanticipated microscopic or near-microscopic malignant neoplasms and other benign and borderline tumors were discovered in the ovaries of the high-risk individuals. Of substantial interest was the finding that among the ovaries of high-risk women, 85% presented two or more and 75% presented three or more of the following histologic features: surface epithelial pseudostratification; surface papillomatosis; deep cortical invaginations of the surface epithelium, frequently with multiple papillary projections within small cystic spaces (microscopic papillary cystadenomas); epithelial inclusion cysts, frequently with epithelial hyperplasia and papillary formations; cortical stromal hyperplasia and hyperthecosis; increased follicular activi
ISSN:0027-8874
1460-2105
DOI:10.1093/jnci/88.24.1810