AI Article Synopsis

  • Ovarian steroid tumors (SCT) and Leydig cell tumors (LCT) are rare but can exhibit aggressive behavior, especially in about one-third of SCT cases.
  • In a study involving 25 tumors, atypical features like large size and necrosis were common, with recurrences and deaths occurring in some patients, mainly in those with malignant SCT.
  • Genetic analysis showed that malignant SCTs had unique genomic changes, while most tumors, even when exhibiting atypical features, typically followed a benign course, highlighting the need for more research on genetic markers for targeted treatment.

Article Abstract

Ovarian steroid and Leydig cell tumors (SCT and LCT, respectively) are rare stromal tumors, with aggressive behavior described in approximately one third of SCTs. Previously reported features potentially predictive of malignancy include size ≥7 cm, gross hemorrhage, necrosis, grade 2 or 3 nuclear atypia, and mitoses ≥2/10 HPFs; however, no subsequent studies have corroborated these findings. Herein, we evaluated a series of 25 tumors (21 SCT, 4 LCT) to explore their clinicopathologic and molecular features. Patients ranged from 16 to 79 years (median: 53 y) and all tumors were FIGO stage I. Recurrences occurred in 3 patients, all of whom died from disease. At least 1 atypical feature was identified in 63% of SCT/LCT and included hemorrhage (n=9), grade 2 or 3 atypia (n=7), mitoses≥2/10 HPFs (n=7), size≥7.0 cm (n=6), and necrosis (n=2); only malignant SCTs demonstrated 4 or 5 atypical features. Next-generation sequencing revealed malignant SCTs were genomically unstable, with uncommon and nonrecurring gene-level alterations ( MDM2/CDK4 coamplification, ATRX rearrangement, BAP1 mutation). One SCT with limited follow-up harbored FH and TP53 mutations and occasional arm-level copy number alterations, while all other sequenced tumors (n=7) were genomically stable; 1 had a CTNNB1 mutation and another a CASP10 mutation. In summary, the presence of at least 1 atypical feature is common in SCT/LCT, but most patients demonstrate a benign clinical course. Genomic alterations are infrequent but occur in malignant SCTs as well as a subset of benign SCTs. Molecular analysis of additional malignant SCTs is necessary to identify recurring and/or potentially actionable targets.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PAS.0000000000002124DOI Listing

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