Abstract from First Ovarian Clear Cell Carcinoma Symposium
Clear Cell Carcinoma of the Ovary: A Report From the First Ovarian Clear Cell Symposium, June 24th, 2010
Gynecol Oncol. 2011 May 1;121(2):407-415, MS Anglesio, MS Carey, M Köbel, H MacKay, DG Huntsman
Abstract
Objectives: Recent literature has highlighted histological types of ovarian carcinoma as distinct diseases, each with unique clinical and molecular features. Historically, the diagnosis of ovarian clear cell carcinoma (CCC) has been of concern to both patients and physicians due to reports that CCC is associated with a worse prognosis than the more common serous type of ovarian carcinoma (HGSC). This review discusses the unique features of ovarian CCC.
Methods: In June of 2010, a group of researchers and clinicians convened in Vancouver to review and discuss the clinical, pathological, molecular, and treatment-related features of CCC.
Results: CCC is the second most common type of ovarian epithelial cancer, representing 5–25% of ovarian carcinomas. It is characterised by its association with endometriosis, and frequent mutations of ARID1A and PIK3CA. Low-stage CCC appears to have a better outcome than stage matched HGSC, while the opposite is true for high-stage disease, suggesting that the current standard treatments applied to HGSC are ineffective for CCC.
Conclusions: Ovarian CCC is highly distinct from HGSC, and a clearer understanding of the basic biology of this disease is needed. Alternative therapies should be explored: irradiation and targeting disease-specific molecular markers should be examined in greater detail. Finally, novel approaches to clinical trial design are needed due to the smaller numbers of patients affected.
Comments
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thank you
very interesting article. More research is needed. Is clear cell, if I understand, more difficult to treat and has a poor survival outcome? I pray for a cure and soon!!!..val0 -
thanks for the info...my
thanks for the info...my cancer is clear cell. Early stage. It frequently gets DX early because it has more pronounced symptoms early on. I had a 16cm tumor...became hard to miss that and yet my stage was 1C because it was encapsulated within that tumor/mass/cyst but did rupture at surgery...duh...seems to me it would be kinda hard to get that large of a mass out without something happening. I'm done with chemo and will hope and pray it does not return but in less than standard medical jargon clear cell is characterized as "slippery".0 -
Glad yours was caught earlysrwruns said:thanks for the info...my
thanks for the info...my cancer is clear cell. Early stage. It frequently gets DX early because it has more pronounced symptoms early on. I had a 16cm tumor...became hard to miss that and yet my stage was 1C because it was encapsulated within that tumor/mass/cyst but did rupture at surgery...duh...seems to me it would be kinda hard to get that large of a mass out without something happening. I'm done with chemo and will hope and pray it does not return but in less than standard medical jargon clear cell is characterized as "slippery".
Glad yours was caught early stage, Sue. Per this info that puts you in the better odds category!!!
Annie0
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