The association of ovarian malignancy with pregnancy is rare; accounting for 3-6% of ovarian masses of which malignant germ cell tumors represent the type most frequently associated with pregnancy, whereas the incidence of epithelial ovarian cancer is only 1/12,000 to 1/50,000 of pregnancies. The diagnosis and management of ovarian cancer in pregnancy remain poorly codified because of the rarity of cases and the limited data available on this pathology. We report here the case of a 45-year-old woman with a large ovarian mucinous adenocarcinoma diagnosed during pregnancy, identified by ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Primary sarcoma in man is very rare and knowledge about this tumor is limited with very few cases published in the literature.
Case Report: A 65-year-old man operated on 20 years ago for a left breast tumor with a skin graft at the tumor site (no documentation or pathology report). He consulted for a mass in the left breast, bleeding on contact, associated with nodules in the right breast that looked suspicious.