Abstract

About 1% of ovarian tumors that comprise testicular cell types can cause hyperandrogenism followed by characteristic virilization. Androgenic group of tumors originated mainly from sex-cord stromal ovarian tumors are including steroid cell tumors, Leydig tumors, granulosa cell tumors, Sertoli cell tumors, Sertoli-Leydig cell tumors, gonadoblastomas, and some other rare forms as ovarian metastases from neuroendocrine tumors. Germline or somatic mutations in some genes like DICER1, STK11, and FOXL2 are associated with the development of some sex cord-stromal ovarian tumors. Basal serum testosterone concentrations above 7 nmol/L could indicate an androgen-secreting tumor. Other ovarian and adrenal androgens should be determined and functional endocrine testing including low-dose dexamethasone suppression test, gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist test, imaging methods, and selective venous sampling should be performed. Surgery is the first-line treatment for most of the tumors. Women who are not good surgical candidates could benefit from use of GnRH agonist to control hyperandrogenism. In some cases, chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy is required while some tumors respond on antiangiogenic agents used alone or in combination with chemotherapy. Metabolic implications and long-term outcomes of ovarian androgen-secreting tumors are unknown and require more detailed follow-up in multicentric and longitudinal clinical studies.

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