A comprehensive population-based study of malignant ovarian tumors, including histologic and immunohistochemical review, in children and adolescents 0-19 years old in Sweden between 1970 and 2014

Gynecol Oncol. 2024 Feb 9:184:206-213. doi: 10.1016/j.ygyno.2024.01.035. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objectives: Ovarian tumors in the pediatric population are rare. The incidence and frequency of subtypes differ between children and adults. Although not all tumors are aggressive, they may still lead to morbidity. The goal of this study was a comprehensive review of malignant ovarian tumors in children and adolescents diagnosed and registered in Sweden.

Methods: Individuals were identified through a search in the National Cancer Register, limited for ages 0-19, years 1970-2014. Stored tumor diagnostic material from regional biobanks was retrieved and reviewed.

Results: The study includes 345 individuals with ovarian tumors and 70.7% of them were between 15 and 19 years at time of diagnosis. No differences in incidence over time or geographic location were identified. The average follow-up time was 21.2 years and 5-year survival was 88.4%. Survival was similar in the different time periods, except for 1970-1979. Review was possible for 260 cases, resulting in 85 epithelial tumors, 121 GCTs, 47 SCSTs and 7 others. For age 0-4 years SCSTs dominated (85.7%), for 5-9- and 10-14-years GCTs dominated (70,8% and 75.0% respectively), and for age 15-19 years epithelial tumors dominated (43.8%). There was a strong agreement between review diagnosis and original diagnosis (Cohen's κ 0.944). Differentiating between entities within the sex cord-stromal group posed the biggest diagnostic challenge.

Conclusions: Ovarian tumors in children and adolescents are rare and distinct from their adult counterparts regarding incidence and frequency. There was a strong concurrence between original and review diagnoses. The greatest diagnostic difficulty was subtyping of epithelial tumors and differentiating between tumors within the SCST group.

Keywords: Girls 0–19 years,; Histologic review; Pediatric ovarian tumors; Population based; Registry study.