MRI of Borderline Epithelial Ovarian Tumors: Pathologic Correlation and Diagnostic Challenges.

Radiographics

From the Departments of Radiology (T.T., T.O., H.F., H.O., A.N., M.T., N.T.) and Pathology (K.S.), Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Borderline epithelial ovarian tumors (BTs) are distinctive tumors that show increased cell growth and abnormal nuclei without invading surrounding tissue, indicating they are an intermediate stage between benign and malignant tumors.
  • BTs usually occur in younger women and have a good prognosis, making accurate diagnosis crucial for potential fertility-sparing surgery.
  • There are six subtypes of BTs that show different MRI characteristics, but due to similarities with benign and malignant lesions, a definitive diagnosis requires histologic confirmation.

Article Abstract

Borderline epithelial ovarian tumors are a distinct pathologic entity characterized by increased epithelial proliferation and nuclear atypia, but without frank stromal invasion. Borderline tumor (BT) is now considered to represent an intermediate phase in the stepwise progression from benign to malignant ovarian epithelial tumor. Since BTs commonly manifest at early stages in women of reproductive age and are associated with a good prognosis, making the correct diagnosis is important in determining whether a patient is a candidate for fertility-sparing surgery. There are six histologic BT subtypes (serous, mucinous, seromucinous, endometrioid, clear cell, and Brenner), and each has different MRI features, reflecting their unique histologic architectures. Radiologists should be aware of the MRI features that can suggest BTs. These features include a hyperintense papillary architecture with hypointense internal branching, which can be observed with serous and seromucinous BTs on T2-weighted images; aggregates of microcysts that have hypointensity on T2-weighted images and reticular enhancement on contrast-enhanced T2-weighted images, which can be seen with mucinous BTs; and moderately high signal intensity on diffusion-weighted images along with relatively high apparent diffusion coefficient values, which can be observed regardless of the histologic subtype. Nevertheless, because the imaging features of BTs overlap with those of many benign lesions (eg, cystadenoma and cystadenofibroma, decidualized endometriosis, and polypoid endometriosis) and malignant tumors (ovarian cancers and metastases), histologic confirmation is required for the final diagnosis. Special emphasis is placed on the MRI features of BTs, pathologic correlation, and the challenges related to diagnosis. RSNA, 2022.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/rg.220068DOI Listing

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