Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2023)

Do Exophytic and Endophytic Patterns in Borderline Ovarian Tumors Have Different Prognostic Implications? A Large Multicentric Experience

  • Vito Andrea Capozzi,
  • Elisa Scarpelli,
  • Luciano Monfardini,
  • Vincenzo Dario Mandato,
  • Carla Merisio,
  • Stefano Uccella,
  • Giulio Sozzi,
  • Marcello Ceccaroni,
  • Vito Chiantera,
  • Giovanna Giordano,
  • Luigi Della Corte,
  • Carmine Conte,
  • Stefano Cianci,
  • Tullio Ghi,
  • Roberto Berretta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12103544
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 3544

Abstract

Read online

Borderline ovarian tumor (BOT) accounts for 15–20% of all epithelial ovarian tumors. Concerns have arisen about the clinical and prognostic implications of BOT with exophytic growth patterns. We retrospectively reviewed all cases of BOT patients surgically treated from 2015 to 2020. Patients were divided into an endophytic pattern (with intracystic tumor growth and intact ovarian capsule) and an exophytic pattern (with tumor growth outside the ovarian capsule) group. Among the 254 patients recruited, 229 met the inclusion criteria, and of these, 169 (73.8%) belonged to the endophytic group. The endophytic group showed more commonly an early FIGO stage than the exophytic group (100.0% vs. 66.7%, p p p = 0.003), peritoneal implants (0 vs. 18.3%, p p = 0.003) were more frequently observed in the exophytic group. The survival analysis showed 15 (6.6%) total recurrences, 9 (5.3%) in the endophytic and 6 (10.0%) patients in the exophytic group (p = 0.213). At multivariable analysis, age (p = 0.001), FIGO stage (p = 0.002), fertility-sparing surgery (p = 0.001), invasive implants (p = 0.042), and tumor spillage (p = 0.031) appeared significantly associated with recurrence. Endophytic and exophytic patterns in borderline ovarian tumors show superimposable recurrence rates and disease-free survival.

Keywords