Neoplastic and Pre-Neoplastic Changes in Gastrointestinal Endometriosis
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
- Vol. 24 (4), 513-524
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000478-200004000-00005
Abstract
The clinicopathologic features of neoplasms arising in gastrointestinal endometriosis have not been well characterized. In this series, we report 17 cases of gastrointestinal endometriosis complicated by neoplasms (14 cases) or precancerous changes (three cases). Four patients, one of whom also had hypermenorrhea, presented with chronic abdominal pain and five had obstructive symptoms; one of these also had rectal bleeding. One patient presented with an acute abdomen and fecal peritonitis, one had vaginal bleeding, and one had a progressive change in bowel habits. Nine patients had a long history of endometriosis, 11 patients had had hysterectomies, and eight of these had also received unopposed estrogen therapy. The lesions involved the rectum (6), sigmoid (6), colon, unspecified (2), and small intestine (3), and comprised 8 endometrioid adenocarcinomas (EA), 4 mullerian adenosarcomas (MAS), 1 endometrioid stromal sarcoma (ESS), 1 endometrioid adenofibroma of borderline malignancy (EBA) with carcinoma in situ, 2 atypical hyperplasias (AH), and one endometrioid adenocarcinoma in situ (ACIS). The tumors ranged in size from 2 to 15 cm and all involved the serosa and muscularis propria. Two tumors extended into the mucosa, with mucosal ulceration in one. Follow-up was available in 11 cases. One patient with EA was dead of disease at 1 year, one had two recurrences at 1 and 2 years, and three were alive with no evidence of disease (ANED) at 9 months to 13 years (mean, 68 mos). The patient with the EBA was ANED at 3 months. Two patients with MAS were ANED at 2 and 3 years. The patient with ESS had a recurrence at 3 years and was ANED 6 years after her original diagnosis. One woman with AH was ANED at 60 months and the patient with ACIS was ANED at 16 months. One of the carcinomas was originally misdiagnosed as a primary intestinal adenocarcinoma. The pathologist should be aware of the possibility of a tumor of genital tract type when evaluating intestinal neoplasms in females, particularly if they have a history of endometriosis and have received unopposed estrogen therapy.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ovarian Endometrioid Carcinoma and Endometriosis Developing in a Postmenopausal Breast Cancer Patient during Tamoxifen Therapy: A Case Report and Review of the LiteratureGynecologic Oncology, 1994
- Endometrioid carcinoma arising from endometriosis of the sigmoid colon during estrogenic treatmentPublished by Wiley ,1993
- Mullerian adenosarcoma of the uterus: A clinicopathologic analysis of 100 cases with a review of the literatureHuman Pathology, 1990
- Endometrioid stromal sarcomas arising from ovarian and extraovarian endometriosis: Report of two cases and review of the literatureGynecologic Oncology, 1990
- Intestinal endometriosisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1984
- Postpartum Perforation of the Colon due to EndometriosisActa Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, 1984
- Endometrioid carcinoma arising from endometriosis of the sigmoid colon: A case reportHuman Pathology, 1981
- Malignancy arising in extragonadal endometriosis.A case report and summary of the world literatureCancer, 1977
- Primary squamous cell carcinoma and adenoacanthoma of the colonCancer, 1971
- Primary adenocarcinoma of the rectovaginal septum probably arising from endometriosis.Report of two casesCancer, 1954