Histologically benign or low-grade malignant tumors adjacent to high-grade ovarian carcinomas contain molecular characteristics of high-grade carcinomas

J Zheng, M Wan, S Zweizig, M Velicescu, M C Yu, L Dubeau
1993 Cancer Research  
It is presently not clear if ovarian carcinomas arise de novo or from benign precursors (cystadenomas) and if high-grade malignant tumors (carcinomas) develop from preexisting low-grade carcinomas. The presence of allelic losses on chromosome 11p15.5 distinguishes high-grade ovarian carcinomas from either low-grade carcinomas or cystadenomas. We therefore examined the distribution of such losses in different parts of heterogeneous tumors showing mixed histological grades or showing adjacent
more » ... e histologically benign neoplasms. The results showed that all neoplastic areas, including those that were histologically benign or compatible with low-grade carcinomas, contained allelic losses at the above locus. This suggests that the morphologically less aggressive portions of these heterogeneous tumors were not typical cystadenomas or low-grade carcinomas and contained molecular abnormalities indicative of at least a predisposition to the high-grade carcinoma phenotype.
pmid:8364906 fatcat:3alcvjnm2fh2bapejpdlr72mna