Germ cell tumor pathophysiology: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Dysgerminoma: pathophysiology)
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== '''Dysgerminoma''' ==
== '''Dysgerminoma''' ==
The [[pathophysiology]] of [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] depends on the [[histological]] subtype. Their common origin is believed to be from the [[primordial germ cells]] that [[Transformation|transformed]] [[Pathology|pathologically]] in different stages of development. It is difficult to distinguish subtypes of ovarian germ cell tumor on gross [[pathology]] alone. The majority of [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] have a [[solid]] and [[cystic]]<nowiki/>appearance with areas of [[hemorrhage]] and [[necrosis]]. On microscopic [[pathology]], [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] may be characterized by a uniform “fried egg” appearance ([[dysgerminoma]]), presence of Schiller-Duval bodies ([[yolk sac tumor]]), presence of embryonic-like neural, [[gastrointestinal]], and/or cartilaginous tissue ([[teratoma]]), or mixed histopathological features (embryonal cell carcinoma).
 
* It is understood that [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] are the result of the [[Pathology|pathologic]] [[transformation]] of [[primordial germ cells]] during different stages of the development.
* The [[pathophysiology]] of [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] depends on the [[histological]] subtype.  
* Their common origin is believed to be from the [[primordial germ cells]] that [[Transformation|transformed]] [[Pathology|pathologically]] in different stages of development.
* It is difficult to distinguish subtypes of ovarian germ cell tumor on gross [[pathology]] alone.
* The majority of [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] have a [[solid]] and [[cystic]]<nowiki/>appearance with areas of [[hemorrhage]] and [[necrosis]].
* On microscopic [[pathology]], [[ovarian]] [[germ cell]] [[tumors]] may be characterized by a uniform “fried egg” appearance ([[dysgerminoma]]), presence of Schiller-Duval bodies ([[yolk sac tumor]]), presence of embryonic-like neural, [[gastrointestinal]], and/or cartilaginous tissue ([[teratoma]]), or mixed histopathological features (embryonal cell carcinoma).





Revision as of 16:54, 13 August 2019

Dysgerminoma


Testicular Seminoma

Germinoma

On microscopic histopathological analysis, uniform cells that resemble primordial germ cells, consisting of large, round cells with vesicular nuclei and clear or finely granular cytoplasm that is eosinophilic are characteristic findings of germinoma. Genes involved in the pathogenesis of germinoma include gains of 1p, 8p, and 12q and losses of 13q and 18q, duplication of the short arm of chromosome 12, loss of 1p and 6q, alterations in sex chromosomes in children, alterations of the p14 gene, mutations of the c-kit gene, aberrations of CCND2 (12P13), and RB1, and gain-of-function mutations of KIT. The progression to germinoma usually involves the mutations of the KIT/RAS signalling or AKT1/mtor pathways and cyclin/CDK-RB-E2F pathway if CCND2(12P13) and RB1 genes are aberrated

Infantile testis teratomas

Yolk sac tumors

References