UNDIFFERENTIATED SARCOMA ARISING IN AN IMMATURE TERATOMA OF THE OVARY: A case report

Int J Surg Case Rep. 2022 Dec:101:107791. doi: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2022.107791. Epub 2022 Nov 22.

Abstract

Introduction: The immature teratomas present less than 1 % of ovarian cancers and affect preferentially young women (1). We report a rare case of an ovarian teratoma harboring undifferentiated sarcoma highlighting the clinical and pathological characteristics.

Case presentation: The patient was a 24-year-old female who consulted for an abdominal mass. Pelvic ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed an ovarian teratoma measuring 22 cm with no evidence of malignancy. She underwent an exploratory laparotomy. She had a unilateral adnexectomy as the ovarian parenchyma was damaged and the fallopian tube was involved in the mass. The final anatomopathological examination revealed the presence of a teratoma with a predominant component of undifferentiated sarcomatous. This component made the prognosis worse and led to a rapid unfavorable evolution with numerous metastases (lung, liver, and peritoneum). She refused all treatment and died within a week of diagnosis.

Discussion: Immature teratoma is a malignant tumor composed of tissues derived from the three embryonic cell lineages at different stages of maturation. This fact makes the determination of its histologic grade by radiologic examination very difficult (1) and consequently raises a challenge in the workup as the prognosis of immature teratomas is closely related to their histologic grade (16). Improved chemotherapy after surgery has increased the 5-year survival rate for these malignancies from 90 % to 100 % (18).

Conclusion: Young women are most commonly affected by immature teratomas. The prognosis and histologic grade are interrelated. To protect fertility, the trend now is treat them more frequently with conservative surgery.

Keywords: Case report; Immature teratoma; Sarcoma; Undifferentiated state; Unfavorable prognosis.

Publication types

  • Case Reports