Low risk of malignancy for small complex adnexal masses


(HealthDay)—For older women with small complex adnexal masses, the overall risk of malignancy is low, according to a study published in the December issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics Gynecology.

Elizabeth Suh-Burgmann, M.D., from the Permanente Medical Group in Walnut Creek, Calif., and colleagues examined outcomes for a large population-based cohort of women older than 50 years with a small (1 to 6 cm) complex adnexal mass reported on ultrasound. The authors reviewed previous or subsequent pelvic ultrasounds to determine when the mass was first identified and whether there was a change over time. They excluded women with concurrent elevated CA125, evidence of metastatic disease, or less than 24 months of clinical follow-up.

The researchers identified 18 cancers or borderline tumors among 1,363 complex masses (1.3 percent). Among 204 women who had immediate surgery after initial ultrasound (15 percent), six cases were diagnosed; 12 additional cases were identified among 994 women who had at least one repeat ultrasound (73 percent). For all borderline and epithelial ovarian cancers, growth was apparent on ultrasound by seven months. Ten of the 12 cases diagnosed during follow-up were found to be stage 1 at surgery.

“Among isolated adnexal masses reported as complex and 1 to 6 cm on pelvic ultrasound in women older than 50 years, the overall risk of malignancy is low,” the authors write.

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American Journal of Obstetrics Gynecology