Management of Suspected Ovarian Masses in Premenopausal Women - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Management of Suspected Ovarian Masses in Premenopausal Women

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Title: Management of Suspected Ovarian Masses in Premenopausal Women


1
Management of Suspected Ovarian Masses in
Premenopausal Women RCOG, 2011 Aboubakr
Elnashar Benha University, Egypt
2
  • CONTENTS
  • Introduction
  • Types of adnexal masses
  • How to minimise patient morbidity
  • Assessment
  • Treatment

3
  • 1. Introduction
  • Premenopausal ovarian masses
  • Benign almost all
  • Malignant
  • lt50y 11000
  • gt50y 31000 .
  • Preoperative differentiation
  • Between the benign and the malignant
  • problematic.
  • Exceptions germ cell tumours
  • elevations of a-FP and hCG.
  • 10 of suspected ovarian masses
  • non-ovarian in origin

4
  • 2. Types of adnexal masses
  • Benign ovarian
  • Functional cysts
  • Endometriomas
  • Serous cystadenoma
  • Mucinous cystadenoma
  • Mature teratoma
  • Ovarian cyst
  • fluid-containing structure 30 mm in diameter
  • 4 of women

5
  • Benign non-ovarian
  • Paratubal cyst
  • Hydrosalpinges
  • Tubo-ovarian abscess
  • Peritoneal pseudocysts
  • Appendiceal abscess
  • Diverticular abscess
  • Pelvic kidney

6
Secondary malignant ovarian Predominantly
breast and gastrointestinal carcinoma.
7
Primary malignant ovarian Germ cell
tumour Epithelial carcinoma Sex-cord
tumour Secondary malignant ovarian Predominantly
breast and gastrointestinal carcinoma.
8
  • 3. How to minimise patient morbidity
  • Conservative management
  • Functional or simple ovarian cysts
  • thin-walled cysts
  • No internal structures
  • 50 mm maximum diameter
  • usually resolve over 23 menstrual cycles
    without the need for intervention.

9
II. Use of laparoscopic techniques where
appropriate cost-effective earlier discharge
from hospital.
10
III. Referral to a gynaecological oncologist
where appropriate. Mean survival time for women
is significantly improved early diagnosis and
referral is important. Indications 1.
Histological diagnosis 2. strong suspicion of
Borderline ovarian tumours 20 of borderline
ovarian tumours appear as simple cysts on US
11
  • 4. Preoperative assessment of women with ovarian
    masses
  • History
  • Examination
  • Blood tests
  • Imaging
  • Estimation the risk of malignancy

12
  • I. History
  • Risk factors
  • Protective factors for ovarian malignancy
  • Family history of ovarian or breast cancer.
  • Symptoms suggestive of
  • endometriosis
  • ovarian malignancy
  • persistent abdominal distension
  • appetite change including increased satiety
  • pelvic or abdominal pain
  • increased urinary urgency and/or frequency.

13
  • II. Physical examination
  • Poor sensitivity in the detection of ovarian
    masses (1551)
  • Essential
  • abdominal and vaginal
  • Evaluation of mass
  • tenderness, mobility, nodularity and ascites.
  • local lymphadenopathy.
  • Acute pain complications should be considered
    (torsion, rupture, hge).

14
  • III. Blood tests
  • Serum CA-125
  • Marker for epithelial ovarian carcinoma
  • raised in 50 of early stage disease.
  • Not indicated simple ovarian cyst
  • unreliable in dd benign from malignant in
    premenopausal women
  • increased rate of false positives and reduced
    specificity.

15
  • Raised in
  • 1. Fibroids
  • 2. Endometriosis
  • in stage IIIIV raised to several hundreds or
    thousands of units/ml.
  • 3. Adenomyosis
  • 4. Pelvic infection.

16
  • ?Raised
  • serial monitoring
  • rapidly rising levels are more likely to be
    associated with malignancy than high levels which
    remain static.
  • lt200 units/ml
  • Further investigations to exclude/treat the
    common differential diagnoses
  • gt200 units/ml
  • discussion with a gynaecological oncologist

17
2. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), a-FP and hCG
should be measured in all women under age 40
with a complex ovarian mass germ cell tumours.
18
IV. Imaging 1. Ultrasound TVS preferable
increased sensitivity over TAS TVSTAS larger
masses and extra-ovarian disease. Colour flow
Doppler Not significantly improve diagnostic
accuracy Colour flow Doppler3D Improve
sensitivity, particularly in complex cases.
19
  • Repeating US in the postmenstrual phase
  • in cases of doubt
  • Endometrial pattern
  • diagnosis of estrogen-secreting tum of the ovary.
  • No single US finding differentiates between
    benign and malignant ovarian masses.

20
  • 2. CT and MRI
  • Routine use does not improve the sensitivity or
    specificity obtained by TVS
  • Indicated
  • evaluation of more complex lesions .
  • Clinical picture and US
  • possibility of malignancy
  • referral to a gynaecological oncology

21
IV. Estimation the risk of malignancy essential
in the assessment of an ovarian mass. 1. RMI
most widely used model 2. Ultrasound
parameters International Ovarian Tumor Analysis
(IOTA) Group
22
3. Simple models CA-125, pulsatility index,
resistance index. 4. Intermediate
models morphology scoring systems and the risk of
malignancy index. 5. Advanced models artificial
neural networks and multiple logistic regression
models 6. CA-125 not useful poor specificity.
23
  • 1. RMI
  • RMI I
  • NICE for women with suspected ovarian malignancy
    the RMI I score should be calculated and used to
    guide the womans management.
  • 1. most effective
  • 2. simple to use and reproducible
  • utility is negatively affected in the
    premenopausal woman
  • incidence of endometriomas, borderline ovarian
    tumours, non-epithelial ovarian tumours and other
    pathologies increasing the level of CA-125 in
    this group

24
Calculation of the RMI I RMI U x M x CA-125. ?
The ultrasound scored 1 point for each of the
following characteristics multilocular cysts,
solid areas, bilateral lesions. metastases,
ascites and U 0 (for an ultrasound score of
0), U 1 (for an ultrasound score of 1), U 3
(for an ultrasound score of 25).
25
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26
? The menopausal status scored as 1
premenopausal and 3 postmenopausal. ?
Postmenopausal No period for more than one year
or age of 50 who have had a hysterectomy.
27
  • ? Serum CA-125 IU/ml
  • vary between zero to hundreds or even thousands
    of units.
  • RMI I score of 200 in the detection of ovarian
    malignancies to be
  • Sensitivity 78
  • Specificity 87

28
2. US alone IOTA Group. high sensitivity,
specificity and likelihood ratios. benign
(B-rules) or malignant (M rules) Sensitivity
95 Specificity 91, Positive likelihood
ratio10 Negative likelihood ratio 0.06.
29
  • M-rules
  • Irregular solid tumour
  • Ascites
  • At least four papillary structures
  • Irregular multilocular solid tumour with largest
    diameter 100 mm
  • Very strong blood flow
  • Women with an ovarian mass with any of the
    M-rules should be referred to a gynaecological
    oncology
  • B-rules
  • Unilocular cysts
  • Presence of solid components where the largest
    solid component lt7 mm
  • Presence of acoustic shadowing
  • Smooth multilocular tumour with a largest
    diameter lt100 mm
  • No blood flow

30
  • Guidelines for management
  • ACOG, SOGC
  • Premenopausal women with a pelvic mass.
  • suspicious for ovarian malignancy referred to
    gynaecological oncologist
  • CA-125 gt200 units/ml
  • Ascites
  • Abdominal or distant Metastasis
  • First-degree relative with breast or ovarian
    cancer.
  • In the largest study validating these guidelines
  • 30 of premenopausal women with ovarian cancer
    would not have been regarded as high risk.

31
  • 5. Management
  • Simple ovarian cyst
  • lt50 mm
  • No follow-up
  • very likely to be physiological and almost
    always resolve within 3 menstrual cycles.
  • 5070 mm
  • yearly ultrasound follow-up
  • gt70mm simple cysts
  • for either further imaging (MRI) or
  • surgical intervention
  • difficulties in examining the entire cyst
    adequately by US.

32
  • 2. Ovarian cysts that persist or increase in size
    unlikely to be functional
  • surgical management.
  • Combined oral contraceptive pill
  • does not promote the resolution of functional
    ovarian
  • cysts.
  • (Cochrane review)

33
3. Mature cystic teratomas (dermoid cysts) grow
over time, increasing the risk of pain and
ovarian accidents Surgical management
preoperative assessment using RMI 1 or
ultrasound rules (IOTA Group).
34
Lines of management I. Surgery The appropriate
route depends on 1. Patient suitability for
laparoscopy and her wishes 2. Mass size,
complexity, likely nature 3. Setting surgeons
skills and equipment.
35
A. Lparotomy In the presence of large masses
with solid components (for example large dermoid
cysts)
36
  • B. Laparoscopic approach
  • Preferred to laparotomy in suitable patients.
  • lower postoperative morbidity (fever, pain)
  • shorter recovery time cost-effective

37
  • Spillage of cyst contents
  • should be avoided
  • preoperative and intraoperative assessment
    cannot absolutely preclude malignancy.
  • use of a tissue bag to avoid peritoneal spill of
    cystic contents bearing in mind the likely
    preoperative diagnosis.
  • Any solid content should be removed using an
    appropriate bag.
  • The use of tissue retrieval bags is commonplace
    but there is no general consensus for their
    routine use.

38
  • Chemical peritonitis
  • spillage of dermoid cyst contents
  • lt0.2 of cases.
  • Meticulous peritoneal lavage of the peritoneal
  • cavity using large amounts of warmed fluid.
  • Cold irrigation fluid
  • hypothermia
  • Difficult retrieval of the contents by
    solidifying the fat-rich contents.

39
  • Endometrioma gt30 mm
  • histology should be obtained to
  • identify endometriosis
  • exclude rare cases of malignancy.
  • peritoneal spill of cyst contents upstage a
    tumour if the suspected endometrioma is actually
    a malignant tumour.
  • This is rare

40
  • Removal of benign ovarian masses should be via
    the umbilical port.
  • 1. less postoperative pain
  • 2. quicker retrieval time than when using lateral
    ports
  • 3. Avoidance of extending accessory ports
  • reducing
  • postoperative pain
  • incisional hernia
  • epigastric vessel injury.
  • improved cosmesis.

41
  • Oophorectomy
  • should be discussed with the woman
    preoperatively.
  • either an expected or unexpected part of the
    procedure.
  • The pros and cons of electively removing an ovary
    should be discussed, taking into consideration
    the
  • womans preference and the specific clinical
    scenario.

42
  • III. Aspiration of ovarian cysts
  • vaginally or laparoscopically
  • less effective
  • high rate of recurrence.
  • RCTs
  • Resolution rates
  • Similar to expectant management (46 vs 44.6).
  • Recurrence rates
  • 53-84.
  • Done
  • highly selected cases
  • following discussion between the woman and her
    clinician

43
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