In "The Good
" I described how a normal functioning ovary can swell a monthly egg-producing
follicle into what's termed a functional cyst, and how that's normal and
harmless. Here will be discussed something entirely different--a true
neoplasm.
"Neoplasm," a word
of Latin and Greek origin meaning "new growth," is not an exaggeration of
normal function, but is actually disease. If birth control pills cannot
make an ovarian cyst go away, or if a screening blood test is suspicious,
then a true neoplasm is suspected. Neoplasia can be either benign
or malignant, or as I've designated them, bad and ugly. What I actually
mean, though, is bad and worse. Even though benign neoplasms are curable,
I've labeled them "bad" because they usually entail surgery of some sort.
And of course malignancy is a different story altogether (see next link). Another word, tumor, is synonymous
with neoplasm, so it also can be either benign or malignant.
The Frozen Section
A diagnostic problem is that
most benign tumors or neoplasms of the ovary can have a malignant counterpart,
and it is often impossible to tell the difference without actually removing
them and putting samples of them under a microscope. In this way, a
pathologist can render a diagnosis you and your doctor can rely on.
This usually takes several days to make it back to the chart, so it's not
very useful at the time of surgery.
Why is this important?
For one thing, many women in such a jam may want to still have children, so
it's important to them that they leave an operating room with as much reproductive
tissue as they came in with, minus the diseased tissue, that is. A
malignancy will dash these hopes, but a woman, although upset over the outcome,
will understand if a doctor has to remove "everything" if there's cancer
and her life would otherwise be at stake. A benign tumor, on the other
hand, while assuring the greatest degree of safety by removing everything,
may offer the option of leaving a tube, ovary, and uterus such that she can
still get pregnant and bear children. It surely would be nice to have
a technique to tell which way the surgery can go without waiting a few days
for the pathology report to come out.
The "frozen section" is a technique
in which, once the tumor (benign or malignant) is removed, but before the
patient is closed, it can be subjected to microscopic techniques that can
render pretty good accuracy. Trouble is, it's not guaranteed accuracy,
so that if it is read benign and the rest of a woman's reproductive organs
are left in place, and then the permanent report were to demonstrate evidence
that the frozen section was wrong and that it really was malignant, there
would have to be a second operation. It's bad enough hearing that your
tumor was malignant, and then that you can't have children, but adding yet
another operation to the mix will make for one bummed out patient.
But being able to get pregnant
if these are your plans is worth this small risk, because usually the results
of the frozen section agree with those of the permanent preparations and reports.
On the other hand, if your "birthin'" days are over, a frozen section is
only necessary if you're heroic for saving ovarian tissue for hormonal support,
which isn't considered the best idea, although allowable (with caution) with
some benign tumors. If you're inclined to that, then you're going to
have to be a good sport about being watched like a hawk, with frequent ultrasounds
and blood work. (Frequent means every 3-12 months, depending on how
long past the incident you go without any suspicion.) Indeed, the age of the patient and her plans for children
play an important role in the type of surgery used.
Can laparoscopy be used? Wait a
sec? What the heck is laparoscopy?
Laparoscopy is a technique in which, as
an outpatient, under a brief period of general anesthesia, small incisions
are made in your navel and below your pubic hair line to allow a doctor to
look into your belly with a lighted scope. With access from the other
small incisions (5 mm-10mm), pole-like instruments can be used to manipulate,
cut out, or drain cysts or tissue. With such small incisions, recover
is very fast and you're home by supper time.
Laparoscopy, like any surgical
procedure--minor or major--requires that a doctor chooses the laparoscopy
candidate wisely. There are certain conditions in which laparoscopy
should not be used.
- Definite malignancy is
one of them, because the amount of surgery (lymph node dissecion, for instance)
does not lend itself well to the limited dexterity of a laparoscope where
ten fingers would do better through a regular incision. There are those
surgeons who claim they can do such involved surgery via laparoscopy, but
they are usually in larger centers or have an overwhelming amount of experience
doing this.
- If the diagnosis is uncertain and
directly looking at a cyst through a laparoscope
makes your doctor feel that more than likely it's a malignancy, spilling
the contents by draining it before trying to drag it, collapsed, through
the small laparoscopic incision might theoretically risk spread. Theoretically.
Lately, the literature has been less concerned with this, but the final word
hasn't been said yet.
- If there is extensive
scarring from an inflamed ovarian mass, like in endometriosis, there could
be damage to underlying pelvic structures or bowel in trying to peel away
the ovarian mass from these otherwise normal structures. Damage to
a ureter (urine tube) or bowel will make necessary further surgery or even
a colostomy.
As scary as all of this sounds, most doctors
have a very good intuition on who makes the best laparoscopy candidate. But no patient should go into any laparoscope procedure "guaranteed" that
they won't wake up with a surprise "regular" incision.
Benign tumors
Even though
a benign neoplasm, or tumor, of the ovary is curable through removal, there
are other considerations. Some, if ruptured upon removal, can be irritating
enough to cause peritonitis, much like a ruptured appendix, even though
the contents are benign. An example of this is a “dermoid” cyst
(teratoma), which is evidence of the ovary’s ability to mysteriously
convert its tissue into almost any type.
In the case of a dermoid, hair, brain
tissue, and teeth are often present. Weird. Even a part of a
jaw bone isn’t unheard of. Glandular tissue in a dermoid can function
to cause hyperthyroidism or adrenal-like problems. The glandular and
other clinical manifestations can cause confusion in the diagnosis which
delays addressing the real problem, which is of course gynecological. Spilling
the contents of a dermoid cyst, as mentioned above, can delay recovery with
its resulting peritonitis.
Some
benign tumors can have estrogen production with resulting menstrual problems.
If a “fibroma” of the ovary
puts out estrogen, a patient may present with no periods at all and feeling
like she’s pregnant. Other cysts can have serous or mucous products
which can swell an ovarian cyst to extremely large sizes. Numerous
twenty-pound (or more!) benign mucinous tumors have been documented.
A functional cyst, as described the previous
article, "The Good" can disappear on its own or
with the temporary use of birth control pills. A true neoplasm, even
when benign, necessitates removal for the following reasons:
1. It can enlarge and its
sheer size can cause an ovary to twist upon itself leading to gangrene.
This is called “torsion,” and death of the ovary occurs because the blood
supply is twisted off. At the time of surgery care must be taken not
to untwist a dead ovary without clamping the veins leading away, lest toxic
substances get into the circulation. (Even functional cysts can get
big enough to do this, and it's not unheard of removing a functional cyst
that has come to this.)
2. A diagnosis is always in doubt
until surgery provides tissue for the pathologist to name the abnormality.
Being too conservative can be dangerous.
3. And between the bad (the benign
tumor) and the ugly (malignancy) are the cysts called benign tumors of “borderline
malignant potential.” A patient's age and fertility plans have
to be the most pertinent concern for the GYN surgeon in planning the surgical
strategy when this tumor of fuzzy designation occurs. Frank discussion
between the doctor and patient must include several “what-if?” considerations
so that a carefully mapped out flow sheet can be followed depending on the
findings at the time of exploration. A malignancy, unfortunately, makes
childbearing a secondary consideration, and it is tragic when treating the
disease to save a young woman's life renders her sterile by forcing the hand
of the surgeon to perform hysterectomy and removal of tubes and ovaries.
We gynecologists always dread the malignancies
Even though surgery is the ultimate
diagnostic step, there are some differences between the benign and the malignant
on ultrasound. Size and consistency of the cysts can give reassurances
or warnings. A large cyst with multiple compartments is a more chilling
presentation. A simple cyst (one chamber), especially if smaller than
6 centimeters, is usually a benign tumor.
Other types of cystic structures
can lead a patient into surgery:
- Swelling of the fallopian
tube, especially when its route of drainage has been cut off (as in tubal
ligation or infection), can lead to significant swelling of this structure
into a huge balloon-animal-like structure. Of course on ultrasound these
convolutions can mimic an ovarian cyst that has a lot of chaotic structure,
leading a doctor to think the sky is falling. Surgery for what is thought
to be an ovarian malignancy turns out to be simply the removal of a tube.
- Remnants of the male reproductive
tract can swell around the tubes. Because they’re not actually part
of the tubes or ovaries, they’re referred to as “paratubal” cysts.
They can become large enough to be confused with ovarian benign tumors indicating
surgery.
- Insulin resistance, thought
to cause Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS), in which
the cycle gets jammed up because of inability to ovulate, leaves the cycle
stuck in the first half, with stimulation of this phase causing multiple follicles
to heap upon each other. This can create quite a mass and lead to surgery.
- Sometimes a functional
cyst can bleed into itself. This is ordinarily harmless, and the blood
will resorb, but all of the clots can make a cyst look falsely malignant
on ultrasound! Sometimes being a gynecologist is a tough job.
- And then again, there's our
old nemesis, endometriosis.
Endometriosis
Endometriosis
is like endometrium.Endometrium is the tissue that builds within the
uterus and then falls apart as a "period" when the hormones crash
at the end of each cycle. I say endometriosis is "like" endometrium,
because no one really knows for sure the way it can end up it remote parts
of the body, which ruins the classic explanation--that it leaks backwards
through the tubes, spilling and implanting in the pelvis. But enodmetriosis
lesions in the brain, nose, navel, and lungs have been documented. (Reports
of nosebleeds with each period, for instance.) Endometrial-like tissue,
unless it ends up on a tampon, tends to cause inflammation and scarring where
it sits. The truth is, this tissue is meant to either be used to implant
a fertrilized egg with pregnancy or to be discarded. Anything else
is trouble.
The body, in
its wisdom, tends to want to wall off infected or inflamed sites. A
good example of this is the ol' zit...or even an abscess. Inflammation
from endometriosis is no different, and the body will mobilize bowel and
bowel fat in the abdomen to stick to these areas. Such scarring is
referred to as adhesions. Unfortunately,
bowel, tubes, and other structures are meant to be unencumbered, not stuck
to fresh, active--or alternately, old, burned out--endometriosis sites, so
that when they try to function, they're twanged, causing pain. Or worse,
infertility.
At the risk
of offending the Menstrual Society (and there really is one), periods can
be a mess. If you cram one into a site that cannot drain or be discarded,
you're likely to get one ugly looking ultrasound picture. Because blood
shows up on ultrasound as a mixture of echos, it can even look malignant,
prompting surgery. Such surgery isn't unnecessary, just incorrectly
provoked, because treatment for an organized mass of endometriosis in the
ovary usually requires surgery. Laparoscopy is very useful in getting
the truth out of a nasty looking ultrasound picture.
Endometriosis,
more likely if you've had a family with it, is a benign process, which
is why I've included it with the benign tumors. But it's hardly innocent.
Few things have caused as much heartache, especially in infertile couples, as endometriosis.
In Summary
Women should maintain a
schedule of routine pelvic exams for two reasons. First, the bad and
the ugly, that is, the benign and the malignant
ovarian tumors, often have no symptoms at all and are caught as an incidental
finding in a routine GYN check-up.
Second, even the benign tumors can possibly undergo malignant transformation,
and catching this in time could make the difference whether a woman loses
her fertility or even her life. When dealing with true neoplasia, we
really have nothing to gain in waiting.