Abstract

Beginning with the discovery of the BRCA-associated ovarian cancer susceptibility genes and subsequent detailed examination of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) specimens, a new paradigm of ovarian carcinogenesis has unfolded with attention to the distal fallopian tube. The primary focus has been an early cancer or neoplasm in the fallopian tube which is seen in virtually all incidentally discovered high-grade serous cancers in asymptomatic women. This high-frequency of tubal involvement in early serous neoplasm (usually in the form of serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma—STIC) has galvanized attention to this organ as a primary source of this disease. However, an enduring mystery has been the relatively low frequency of STIC in the fallopian tubes of women with advanced malignancy. This paradox, a high frequency of tubal involvement early on and a low frequency of involvement later in the disease process, has spurred interest in other potential sources, such as the ovarian surface epithelium or cortical inclusions and the secondary Mullerian system. However, because essentially all high-grade serous carcinomas are linked by TP53 mutations, and because fallopian tubes frequently contain early serous proliferations (ESPs) with these mutations, attention has turned to the possibility that the nonmalignant but TP53 mutated tubal epithelium could be responsible for an eventual malignancy. Recent data have shown evidence of a lineage continuity between ESPs and concurrent serous carcinomas prompting the concept of “precursor escape”. This creates a second component of the paradigm by which cells from early precursors are shed from the tube and undergo subsequent malignant transformation, emerging suddenly as widespread intraperitoneal malignancy. This dualistic model thus provides a unique pathway by which the future outcome (wide spread high-grade serous carcinomas—HGSC) is ultimately explained by going back in time to an early serous proliferation. This paradigm also brings the peritoneal cavity into focus, raising new questions about the potential co-variables or exposures that might facilitate the occasional malignant transformation of an ESP in the peritoneal cavity or on the peritoneal surface.

Highlights

  • Beginning with the discovery of the BRCA-associated ovarian cancer susceptibility genes and subsequent detailed examination of risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy (RRSO) specimens, a new paradigm of ovarian carcinogenesis has unfolded with attention to the distal fallopian tube

  • The sectioning and extensive examination of the fimbria (SEE-FIM) dissection protocol the distal fallopian tube, which is where the majority of early malignancies were found (Table 1) [9]. This was followed by studies of earlier precursor lesions in the fallopian tube, ranging from small stretches of epithelium (p53 signatures) to proliferations termed serous tubal intraepithelial lesions in transition or serous tubal intraepithelial lesions (STIL) [7,10,11,12]

  • A nagging question regarding pelvic serous carcinogenesis has been a paradox created by the fact that when high-grade serous carcinomas (HGSC) is detected “early”, it is invariably confined to the fallopian tube; but when advanced, A nagging question regarding pelvic serous carcinogenesis has been a paradox created by the fact that when HGSC is detected “early”, it is invariably confined to the fallopian tube; but when advanced, it often does not reveal an obvious malignant launch point in the fimbrial mucosa

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Summary

The Past

Ovarian cancer has been one of the most unique and perplexing diseases to diagnose and treat over the past 50 years This is largely due to the inability of investigators to pinpoint its origins as well as the difficulty in detecting the tumor at a curable stage, combined with eventual resistance to chemotherapy [1]. Systems for designating origin have been primarily dependent upon the location of tumor rather than the identification of a specific carcinogenic sequence [2]. Because most of these carcinomas do involve the ovarian surface, an origin in the ovarian surface epithelium was presumed [2].

The Paradigm Shift
Unanswered Questions
Serous Cancer Precursors in the Fallopian Tube
Early Serous Proliferations and “Precursor Escape”
De-Mystifying a Paradox
Unanswered
Findings
Conclusions
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