Abstract

BackgroundEpidemiology and pathology of ovarian tumors in the pediatric population are very different of these encountered in women. Few attempts have been made to analyze the whole spectrum of ovarian pathology in children, and only some of them included series of more than 200 cases. We performed a retrospective analysis of clinical and diagnostic aspects of ovarian tumors and tumor-like lesions in girls in order to identify the characteristics associated with malignancy with an attempt to elaborate a clinical management algorithm.ResultsThe study group comprised 214 patients operated on for ovarian tumor in years 1991-2014 at the pediatric surgical center. Non-neoplastic ovarian lesion was diagnosed in 127 females. Sixty-five patients had a benign tumor and 22 had a malignant lesion. Abdominal pain was the most common symptom in the non-malignant lesion group. Patients with ovarian malignancy presented predominantly with abdominal distension and palpable mass. In the non-malignant group imaging studies revealed cystic lesion in 124 patients (68.89%) and solid mass in 10 (5.55%). Malignant lesion showed a solid or mixed structure in all cases. Positive tumor markers were noted in 14 (13.7%) patients with a benign lesion and in 14 (70%) with ovarian malignancy. Large lesions were found in 77.3% of girls with a malignant mass, while only in 32.8% of patients with a benign lesion (p < 0.001). In the group of solid tumors positive tumor marker results occurred more frequently in patients with diagnosed malignant tumors (p < 0.05). Positive tumor markers, large size of the lesion and age below 14 years were independent variables differentiating malignant tumors from non-malignant lesions (p = 0.00000).ConclusionsPredominantly solid structures noted on imaging studies, large dimension and positive tumor markers are clinical predictors of malignancy. A diagnosis of purely cystic lesions with negative markers or of a small size should be an indication for a gonad-sparing procedure. Treatment guidelines for ovarian lesions in children should be established on the basis of multicenter prospective studies and introduced as soon as possible in order to improve and unify the ovarian preservation rates across the pediatric surgical centers.

Highlights

  • Epidemiology and pathology of ovarian tumors in the pediatric population are very different of these encountered in women

  • There was no significant statistical difference between the non-malignant and malignant group when age at presentation was factored into the analysis [median age in nonmalignant group was 14.0 (8.0÷16.0) years versus 10.0 (7.0÷14.0) years in malignant group, p = 0.134]

  • Logistic regression analysis revealed the age below 14 years to be one of the independent variables differentiating malignant tumors from non-malignant lesions (p = 0.0270)

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Summary

Introduction

Epidemiology and pathology of ovarian tumors in the pediatric population are very different of these encountered in women. We performed a retrospective analysis of clinical and diagnostic aspects of ovarian tumors and tumor-like lesions in girls in order to identify the characteristics associated with malignancy with an attempt to elaborate a clinical management algorithm. Ovarian masses in girls represent a wide pathological spectrum ranging from tumor-like conditions to highly aggressive malignant tumors. Young patients with ovarian lesions are admitted initially for evaluation to pediatric or pediatric surgical centers. It is essential to understand true clinical nature of ovarian lesions in pediatric population and to elaborate a clinical management plan suited for young patients. We performed a detailed analysis of clinical aspects of ovarian masses in girls operated on at our institution. Based on the 24-year experience we aimed to determine the features that are associated with gonadal malignancy and to develop management algorithm useful in clinical practice

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