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Adnexal masses in the premenopausal patient. | LitMetric

Adnexal masses in the premenopausal patient.

Clin Obstet Gynecol

*Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital †Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

Published: March 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Adnexal masses in premenopausal women can have various causes, making diagnosis challenging; initial evaluation should focus on acute issues and cancer risk assessment.
  • Pelvic ultrasound is the primary tool for assessing these masses, with MRI used if ultrasound results are inconclusive; serum marker tests help evaluate potential malignancy.
  • Conservative approaches are favored for benign findings, while high suspicion of cancer necessitates referral to a specialist; unclear cases may require careful surgical removal for diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Practitioners may frequently encounter adnexal masses in premenopausal women. Adnexal masses can represent a wide variety of etiologies, and therefore they can represent a diagnostic dilemma. When an adnexal mass is found the initial work up must focus on identifying acute pathology followed by determining the risk of a malignancy. Pelvic ultrasound remains the mainstay for evaluation of adnexal masses in premenopausal patients. If ultrasounds findings are indeterminate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the next imaging modality of choice. The evaluation for malignancy should include serum marker screening. Aspiration of adnexal masses is generally avoided, due to the lack of therapeutic benefit and risk of seeding a tumor. When ultrasound findings are suggestive of benign disease, conservative management, including repeat imaging, should be considered. If the clinical suspicion for malignancy is high referral to a gynecologic oncologist is warranted. In other patients whom the evaluation of their adnexal mass remains unclear surgical excision with care not to disrupt the integrity of the mass should be performed for pathologic diagnosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/GRF.0000000000000087DOI Listing

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