MS Teams Session - Clinical Pathological Conference of the Ovary Flashcards
what is the epidemiology of ovarian cancer?
- 600 cases per year in Scotland
- 400 deaths per year in Scotland
- 23.8 per 100,000 women per year
•5 year survival all stages 40-45%
Most present with advanced disease
who tends to get ovarian cancer?
- Rare < 30 years (often women in their 50s)
- High risk families 5-10% of cases
- HNPCC/Lynch type II familial cancer syndrome
- BRCA1
- BRCA2
•‘Incessant ovulation’
OCP protective
what are the origins of ovarian cancer?
- Most cases probably actually originate from the fallopian tube
- Some derive from pre-existing benign ovarian cysts (often low grade cancers)
ovarian cancer can have different origins and what is the pathogenesis for each of them?
Green is the most common type of ovarian cancer seen and is the biggest killer of these ladies
Implications of low grade serous carcinoma is very different but can develop into a high grade one, but low grade tend to have longer survival time and don’t respond as well to chemotherapy as not growing rapidly/proliferating as fast
what is the role of pathology?
•Type of tumour:
- Benign
- Borderline
- Malignant
- Tumour grade
- Tumour stage
All this will help decide prognosis and treatment
what is shown here?
Serous cystadenoma
what is shown here?
Serous borderline tumour
what is shown here?
Serous Carcinoma
what are the symptoms of ovarian cancer?
- Vague! (often missed)
- Indigestion/early satiety/poor appetite
- Altered bowel habit/pain
- Bloating/discomfort/weight gain
- Pelvic mass:
- asymptomatic
- pressure symptoms
how is a diagnosis of ovarian cancer made?
- Surgical/Pathological
- US Scan abdomen and pelvis
- CT Scan
- CA 125 (test measures the amount of the protein CA 125 (cancer antigen 125) in your blood. may be used to monitor certain cancers during and after treatment. may be used to look for early signs of ovarian cancer in people with a very high risk of the disease)
- Surgery
CA 125 is a marker and a Glyco-protein antigen, what may it be raised in?
•Malignancy
- ovary
- colon/pancreas
- breast
•Benign conditions
- menstruation/endometriosis/PID
- liver disease/recent surgery/effusions
CA125:
- 80% of women with ovarian cancer have a raised _________
- 50% of women with stage _ disease
- Used in detecting and monitoring __________ ovarian tumours
not __________
CA 125
1
epithelial
diagnostic
what is risk of malignancy index?
RMI=U x M x CA 125
•Ultra sound features
- multi-locular
- solid areas
- bilateral
- ascites
- intra-abdominal
- Menopausal status
- CA 125 level
what are the different stages of ovarian cancer?
how is the treatment of ovarian cancer done?
- Surgery
- Chemotherapy
- Adjuvant
- Neo-adjuvant