Clinical, imaging, histological and surgical aspects regarding giant paraovarian cysts: a systematic review

IA Stefanopol, L Baroiu, AI Neagu… - … and Clinical Risk …, 2022 - Taylor & Francis
Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management, 2022Taylor & Francis
Paraovarian cysts (POCs) develop within the broad ligament of the uterus. POCs are
considered to be giant when the threshold of 150 mm is exceeded. Clinical signs and
symptoms occur as a consequence of the pressure effect on adjacent organs or due to
complications. Abdominal ultrasonography, computed tomography or magnetic resonance
imaging are useful imaging tools, but most often the exact origin of such voluminous cysts is
revealed only by surgical exploration. The review aims to appraise and update the …
Abstract
Paraovarian cysts (POCs) develop within the broad ligament of the uterus. POCs are considered to be giant when the threshold of 150 mm is exceeded. Clinical signs and symptoms occur as a consequence of the pressure effect on adjacent organs or due to complications. Abdominal ultrasonography, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging are useful imaging tools, but most often the exact origin of such voluminous cysts is revealed only by surgical exploration. The review aims to appraise and update the diagnostic, the histological aspects and the treatment of the giant POCs in rare cases. We carried out a systematic search in Medline-PubMed, Google Scholar and ResearchGate electronic databases. Twenty-seven papers fulfilling the selection criteria were included in the review. The data extracted included information about first author, year of publication, country, patient age, size and side of the POCs, symptoms, tumoral markers, imaging methods, preoperative diagnosis, surgical management and histopathological findings. Although not very numerous, all the studies highlighted the low incidence of giant POCs, the impossibility of establishing the origin of the cystic mass by clinical and imaging methods even with advanced technical tools and the low risk of torsion (11.1%). Despite the recognized benign nature of POCs, we found an unexpected high percent (25.9%) of borderline giant POCs. Surgical excision is the only treatment option. Ovarian-sparing surgery was performed in 85.1% of the cases, and minimally invasive techniques were applied in only 42.9% of the patients, which demonstrates the need of a high-level laparoscopic expertise. Knowledge of this pathology, its recognition as a possible etiology of an abdominopelvic cyst, and a higher awareness of the possibility of a borderline histology in giant POCs are required for the proper management of these particular cases.
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