一个不祥之兆:粘液性卵巢癌与修女玛丽约瑟夫结节

A. Hunter, S. Addley
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摘要

尽管在手术和肿瘤治疗方面取得了两个世纪的进展,但卵巢癌仍然是最致命的妇科癌症,每年夺去全球近18.5万名妇女的生命。历史上被认为是一种单一疾病,人们越来越认识到卵巢癌实际上是一系列具有不同细胞起源、分子驱动途径和临床病理特征的恶性肿瘤。黏液性卵巢癌(mOC)是一种罕见的组织学亚型,在准确诊断和治疗方面提出了特殊的挑战。常与卵巢外黏液性肿瘤的转移性沉积相混淆,原发mOC的真实发生率估计在3-5%之间。通常影响年轻女性,晚期疾病的预后非常糟糕,中位生存期<15个月。这个病例报告描述了一个38岁的病人谁提出迅速恶化腹胀。随后的减体积手术切除了一个重2.4kg的肿块,组织病理学证实为高级别粘液性卵巢癌伴间变性癌的壁结节。我们将讨论当前管理指南背后的证据,解决我们最近对mOC作为一种独立于其他组织型的疾病的理解,以及在解释mOC患者代表性不足的大型多中心试验数据时随之而来的挑战。此外,以玛丽约瑟夫修女结节(SMJN)为例,本病例还强调了体格检查的重要性和细微(有时被遗漏)临床体征的价值,这些临床体征为患者潜在疾病的程度和预后提供了重要线索。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Ominous Sign: Mucinous Ovarian Carcinoma with Sister Mary Joseph Nodule
Despite two centuries of progress in its surgical and oncological management, ovarian cancer remains the most lethal of the gynaecological cancers, claiming the lives of nearly 185,000 women globally each year. Historically considered a single disease, there is growing recognition that ovarian cancer is in fact a spectrum of malignancies with distinct cellular origins, molecular driver pathways and clinicopathological features. Mucinous ovarian carcinoma (mOC) is a rare histological subtype that presents a particular challenge in accurate diagnosis and management. Frequently confused with metastatic deposits from extra-ovarian mucinous tumours, the true incidence of primary mOC is estimated to be between 3-5%. Typically affecting younger women, prognosis for late-stage disease is abysmal with a median survival of <15 months. This case report describes a 38-year-old patient who presented with rapidly worsening abdominal distension. Subsequent debulking surgery removed a mass weighing 2.4kg, confirmed by histopathology as a high grade mucinous ovarian carcinoma with a mural nodule of anaplastic carcinoma. Evidence behind the current guidelines for management will be discussed, addressing our recent understanding of mOC as a separate disease from other histotypes and the consequent challenges in interpreting data from large multicentre trials in which patients with mOC are poorly represented. Moreover, using the Sister Mary Joseph nodule (SMJN) as an example, this case also highlights the importance of the physical examination and the value of subtle (and sometimes missed) clinical signs that provide important clues about the extent of a patient’s underlying disease and prognosis.
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