Staging with Unilateral Salpingo-Oophorectomy and Expert Pathological Review Result in No Recurrences in a Series of 81 Intestinal-Type Mucinous Borderline Ovarian Tumors

Kobe Dewilde(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Philippe Moerman(KU Leuven), Karin Leunen(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Frédéric Amant(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Patrick Neven(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Ignace Vergote(Cancer Institute (WIA))
Gynecologic and Obstetric Investigation
July 7, 2017
Cited by 9Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Recent studies suggest that mucinous borderline ovarian tumors (MBOTs) belong to a high-risk group that is more likely to develop an invasive recurrence. The objective is to determine these risk factors. METHODS: A monocentric retrospective review of all consecutive patients with intestinal-type MBOT diagnosed between 1993 and 2013. All tumors were evaluated by one pathologist without knowledge of clinical outcome. Extensive surgical staging and pathological tumor sampling (1 block/cm diameter in tumors <10 cm and 2 blocks/cm diameter in tumors >10 cm) were performed in all cases. RESULTS: A total of 81 patients were included. Patients with micro-invasion were also included. None of the patients recurred. No bilateral tumors, nor tumors with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage II or higher, were diagnosed. Median follow-up was 87 months. CONCLUSIONS: In our series of pure intestinal-type MBOT, including micro-invasion, no recurrences were observed. Given the heterogeneity of these tumors staging with at least unilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, extensive pathological sampling, and expert pathological review are of paramount importance to be able to diagnose a pure intestinal-type MBOT and excluding gastrointestinal mucinous tumors and more important, excluding an invasive focus, defining a mucinous ovarian carcinoma. When these conditions are fulfilled, the prognosis of pure intestinal-type MBOT is excellent.


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