Ovarian tumors, or ovarian neoplasms, are tumors found in the ovary. They can be benign or malignant (ovarian cancer). They consist of mainly solid tissue, while ovarian cysts contain fluid.
Tumor of the ovary vary remarkably as they may arise from any of the 3 cell types of the normal ovary.
Ovarian tumors are classified according to the histology of the tumor, obtained in a pathology report. Histology dictates many aspects of clinical treatment, management, and prognosis.
The most common forms are:
Type | Subtype | Relative incidence[1] | Percent malignant | Comments | Micrograph |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mature cystic teratoma | 46.0% | 0.17% to 2%[2] | Cystic, with elements of all 3 germ layers (endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm).[3] | ||
2.5% | 100% | A teratoma that contains anaplastic immature elements, and is often synonymous with malignant teratoma.[4] | |||
Other germ cell tumors | 3.0% | Others mainly include dysgerminoma, yolk sac tumor, struma ovarii and squamous cell carcinoma arising from a dermoid cyst, and malignant mixed germ cell tumor. | |||
Serous tumor | 25% | 18.5% | Benign serous tumors of the right ovarian cyst are thinwalled unilocular cysts that are lined by ciliated pseudostratified cuboidal or columnar epithelium.[5] | ||
Mucinous tumor | 15% | 8.8% | Benign mucinous tumors of the ovary consist of simple, nonstratified columnar epithelium with basally-located hyperchromatic nuclei and resemble gastric foveolar epithelium. | ||
1% | Almost 100% | Tubular glands, resembling endometrium.[6] | |||
Other surface-epithelial tumors | 1.5% | Others include mainly malignant mixed Müllerian tumor, Brenner tumor and mixed epithelial tumor. | |||
1.5% | 0% | Spindle-shaped fibroblastic cells and abundant collagen.[7] | |||
1% | Almost 100% | Small, bland, cuboidal to polygonal cells in various patterns.[8] | |||
Other sex cord-stromal tumors | 1% | Others include mainly juvenile granulosa cell tumor, thecoma and sclerosing stromal tumor | |||
Secondary/metastatic) tumor | 2% | 100% | Usually from breast cancer, colon cancer, endometrial cancer, stomach cancer or cervical cancer.[9] |
Mixed tumors contain elements of more than one of the above classes of tumor histology.
An 1882 article appearing in Scientific American mentions the case of a patient at University of Pennsylvania Hospital when Dr. William Goodell removed a 112 lbs tumor from a 31 year old patient, who weighted 75 lbs after removal from the tumor.[10]