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Endometrioid Carcinoma of Ovary
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Endometrioid Carcinoma of Ovary

Cut surface of an ovary replaced by large tan mass.
Neoplasm is predominantly solid and fleshy.
No normal tube or ovary seen.
(Description By:Melinda Sanders, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by: Hartford Hospital )
Endometrioid Carcinoma
Etiology

10% of patients have evidence of ovarian or ovarian-breast cancer syndrome (see pathogenesis)
remainder sporadic
15-30% associated with synchronous endometrial carcinoma
associated with endometriosis
Pathogenesis

mutations in BRCA1 in familial cases,
Epidemiology

peri- or post-menopausal women of low parity
gonadal dysgenesis
ovarian epithelial carcinoma = 6% of female cancer and 50% of female cancer deaths due to late detection and failure to determine high risk group
endometrioid = 20% of ovarian cancers; 40% bilateral
General Gross Description

smooth or irregular external surface
predominantly solid, although may be partially cystic
white, firm, focally necrotic and hemorrhagic on section
General Microscopic Description

indistinguishable from endometrial carcinoma
glands or glands mixed with solid areas
round to oval vesicular (clear) nuclei with
prominent nucleoli
Clinical Correlation

early symptoms vague, late abdominal distension with ascites and pain
rarely detected on routine examination
Stage I confined to ovary(ies), II confined to pelvis, III with extension to abdominal cavity, IV distant metasases
most women Stage III or IV at presentation
spread across serosal surfaces and to lymph nodes
removal of bulk of tumor and chemotherapy are major therapy
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 1065-1068
Endometrioid Carcinoma
Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T87000M83803)[42]
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