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Ovarian Diseases and Tumors

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Non-Neoplastic Ovarian Lesions - Cystic Conundrums

  • Follicular Cysts: Most common. Unruptured/resealed Graafian follicle. Usually < 2.5 cm. Often regress spontaneously.
  • Corpus Luteum Cysts: Post-ovulation. May cause pain, delayed menses. Prone to hemorrhage. Often > 3 cm.
  • Theca Lutein Cysts: Bilateral, multiple. Due to ↑ hCG (e.g., molar pregnancy, choriocarcinoma). Lined by luteinized theca cells.
  • Endometriotic Cysts (Chocolate Cysts): Endometrial glands/stroma in ovary. "Chocolate" fluid (old blood).

    ⭐ Endometriotic cysts ("chocolate cysts") contain old, dark brown blood; strongly associated with dysmenorrhea and infertility.

Ovarian Tumor Classification - Tumor Terrain

  • Ovarian tumors are primarily classified by their presumed cell of origin.
  • Four main categories:
    • Surface Epithelial-Stromal Tumors: Most common (~70%), arise from ovarian surface epithelium or cortical invaginations.
    • Germ Cell Tumors: Originate from primordial germ cells (~20%), common in young females/adolescents.
    • Sex Cord-Stromal Tumors: From ovarian stroma/sex cords (~8%), often hormonally active.
    • Metastatic Tumors: Secondary to other primary cancers (~2%), e.g., Krukenberg tumor from GIT.

⭐ Serous cystadenocarcinoma is the most common malignant ovarian epithelial tumor overall, while dysgerminoma is the most common malignant germ cell tumor.

Epithelial Ovarian Tumors - Epithelial Exposé

  • Most common group of ovarian tumors (65-75%).
  • Derived from surface epithelium or Mullerian epithelium.
  • Risk factors: Nulliparity, early menarche, late menopause, family history (BRCA1/2).
  • Types:
    • Serous: Most common (~30% of all ovarian tumors, 40% of malignant). Psammoma bodies. Often bilateral.
    • Mucinous: Large, multicystic. Pseudomyxoma peritonei if ruptured.
    • Endometrioid: Often associated with endometriosis or endometrial carcinoma. 15-30% bilateral.
    • Clear cell: Associated with endometriosis, hypercalcemia. Hobnail cells.
    • Brenner: Usually benign. Transitional (urothelial-like) epithelium. Coffee-bean nuclei.
  • Tumor marker: CA-125 (non-specific, useful for monitoring).

Serous cystadenocarcinoma of ovary with psammoma bodies

⭐ Serous tumors are the most common malignant epithelial ovarian tumors, and BRCA1/2 mutations significantly increase risk, particularly for high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC).

Germ Cell Ovarian Tumors - Germ Cell Galaxy

  • From germ cells; affect young women/adolescents.
  • Dysgerminoma: Most common malignant GCT; ↑LDH; radiosensitive. "Fried egg" cells.
  • Yolk Sac Tumor (Endodermal Sinus Tumor): ↑AFP; Schiller-Duval bodies (glomeruloid). Common in children.
  • Teratoma:
    • Mature (Dermoid Cyst): Most common GCT overall; benign; elements from ≥2 germ layers (e.g. hair, teeth).
    • Immature: Malignant; graded by immature neuroepithelium.
    • Monodermal: e.g., Struma ovarii (thyroid), carcinoid.
  • Choriocarcinoma (Non-gestational): ↑hCG; aggressive; early hematogenous spread.
  • Embryonal Carcinoma: Rare, malignant; ↑AFP & ↑hCG. Sheets of primitive cells. Ovarian Germ Cell Tumor Histology

⭐ Dysgerminoma is the ovarian counterpart of testicular seminoma and is highly radiosensitive.

Sex Cord-Stromal & Metastatic Tumors - Stromal & Seeding Stories

  • Sex Cord-Stromal Tumors: Originate from ovarian stroma/sex cords.
    • Granulosa Cell Tumor: Most common malignant. Produces estrogen (precocious puberty, endometrial hyperplasia). Call-Exner bodies (coffee-bean nuclei). Inhibin positive.
    • Fibroma/Thecoma: Benign. Fibroma associated with Meigs' syndrome (ovarian tumor, ascites, pleural effusion).
    • Sertoli-Leydig Cell Tumor: Secretes androgens (virilization). Reinke crystals.
  • Metastatic Tumors (Secondary):
    • Krukenberg Tumor: Bilateral metastases, typically from gastric adenocarcinoma. Signet-ring cells.
    • Pseudomyxoma Peritonei: Mucinous ascites, often from appendiceal tumor.

⭐ Meigs' syndrome triad: ovarian fibroma (or other benign pelvic tumor), ascites, and pleural effusion. Resolves after tumor resection.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Serous cystadenocarcinoma: Most common malignant ovarian tumor; CA-125 marker.
  • Mature cystic teratoma (dermoid cyst): Most common germ cell tumor (benign); diverse tissues.
  • Granulosa cell tumor: Produces estrogen; Call-Exner bodies; risk of endometrial hyperplasia.
  • Krukenberg tumor: Metastatic signet ring cell adenocarcinoma (often gastric origin).
  • Meigs syndrome: Triad of ovarian fibroma, ascites, and hydrothorax.
  • Yolk sac tumor: Produces AFP; characteristic Schiller-Duval bodies.
  • Dysgerminoma: Most common malignant GCT; radiosensitive; ↑LDH, ↑hCG.

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Which of the following statements about seminomas is false?

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_____ cell nests are seen in Brenner tumor of the ovary

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_____ cell nests are seen in Brenner tumor of the ovary

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