Diagnostic challenge for ovarian malignant melanoma in premenopausal women: Primary or metastatic?
2011

Ovarian Malignant Melanoma: A Diagnostic Challenge

publication Evidence: low

Author Information

Author(s): Sbitti Yassir, Fadoukhair Zouhour, Kadiri Habiba, Oukabli Mohamed, Essaidi Ismail, Kharmoum Saoussan, M'rabti Hind, Albouzidi Abderrahmane, Ichou Mohammed, Errihani Hassan

Primary Institution: University Military Hospital, Rabat, Morocco

Hypothesis

Can ovarian malignant melanoma be mistaken for primary ovarian cancer?

Conclusion

Ovarian metastasis from cutaneous melanoma is rare and typically has a poor prognosis.

Supporting Evidence

  • Metastatic malignant melanoma to the ovary is uncommon and can mimic primary ovarian cancer.
  • Imaging techniques often fail to distinguish between primary and metastatic ovarian tumors.
  • Histopathological analysis and immunohistochemistry are crucial for accurate diagnosis.

Takeaway

Sometimes, cancer that starts in the skin can spread to the ovaries and look like a different kind of cancer, which makes it hard for doctors to figure out.

Methodology

Case report of a 45-year-old woman with a history of cutaneous melanoma who developed ovarian metastasis.

Limitations

The case report is based on a single patient, limiting generalizability.

Participant Demographics

One 45-year-old premenopausal woman.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1186/1477-7819-9-65

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