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Imaging in gynecological disease (28) : clinical and ultrasound characteristics of serous and mucinous cystadenomas in the adnexa

Mascilini, F. ; Moro, F. ; Pasciuto, T. ; Sladkevicius, P. LU orcid ; Froyman, W. ; Jokubkiene, L. LU ; Van Holsbeke, C. ; Franchi, D. ; Epstein, E. LU and Guerriero, S. , et al. (2025) In Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology 66(2). p.233-241
Abstract

Objective: To describe the clinical and ultrasound characteristics of serous and mucinous cystadenomas in the adnexa. Methods: This was a retrospective international multicenter study. Using the International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) database, patients with a histological diagnosis of serous or mucinous cystadenoma who had undergone preoperative ultrasound examination between 1999 and 2016 (IOTA studies phase 1, 1b, 2, 3 and 5) were identified. All masses were described using the standardized IOTA terminology. The diagnosis assigned by the original ultrasound examiner based on subjective assessment was recorded. Two reviewers assessed the available digital ultrasound images using pattern recognition to identify typical sonographic... (More)

Objective: To describe the clinical and ultrasound characteristics of serous and mucinous cystadenomas in the adnexa. Methods: This was a retrospective international multicenter study. Using the International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) database, patients with a histological diagnosis of serous or mucinous cystadenoma who had undergone preoperative ultrasound examination between 1999 and 2016 (IOTA studies phase 1, 1b, 2, 3 and 5) were identified. All masses were described using the standardized IOTA terminology. The diagnosis assigned by the original ultrasound examiner based on subjective assessment was recorded. Two reviewers assessed the available digital ultrasound images using pattern recognition to identify typical sonographic features of cystadenomas. Results: A total of 1318 patients were included: 687 (52.1%) with serous cystadenomas and 631 (47.9%) with mucinous cystadenomas. Based on the data recorded prospectively in the IOTA database, for serous cystadenomas the median diameter of the largest tumor was 68 (range, 14–320) mm. Most serous cystadenomas were described as unilateral (588/687 (85.6%)), with unilocular (274/687 (39.9%)) or multilocular (221/687 (32.2%)) morphology, and most had anechoic cyst content (508/687 (73.9%)). Most serous cystadenomas were not vascularized (color score of 1; 327/687 (47.6%)) or were poorly vascularized (color score of 2; 253/687 (36.8%)) on color Doppler examination. The original ultrasound examiner correctly classified 91.1% (626/687) of serous cystadenomas as benign and suggested the correct specific diagnosis in 51.5% (354/687) of tumors. For mucinous cystadenomas, the median diameter of the largest tumor was 93 (range, 12–550) mm. Most mucinous cystadenomas were described as unilateral (594/631 (94.1%)) with multilocular morphology (357/631 (56.6%)), and most manifested low-level echogenicity (334/631 (52.9%)). Most mucinous cystadenomas were poorly (color score of 2; 248/631 (39.3%)) or moderately (color score of 3; 194/631 (30.7%)) vascularized on color Doppler examination. The original ultrasound examiner correctly classified 87.5% (552/631) of mucinous cystadenomas as benign and suggested the correct specific diagnosis in 42.9% (271/631) of tumors. Based on pattern recognition (review of ultrasound images available for 433 tumors), the most typical sonographic features of serous cystadenomas were unilocular cyst (100/211 (47.4%)) or multilocular cyst with < 10 cyst locules (71/211 (33.6%)), whereas the typical features of mucinous cystadenomas were multilocular cyst with < 10 cyst locules (99/222 (44.6%)), unilocular cyst (78/222 (35.1%)) or multilocular cyst with > 10 cyst locules (31/222 (14.0%)). A honeycomb nodule was found in some mucinous cystadenomas (31/222 (14.0%)) but was not found in serous cystadenomas. Conclusions: Serous and mucinous cystadenomas exhibit typical sonographic features, allowing ultrasound examiners to assign a correct specific diagnosis to most tumors. Recognizing the ultrasound features of cystadenomas and avoiding misdiagnosing them as malignant can help prevent surgery for these benign tumors in asymptomatic patients.

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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
cystadenoma, ovarian neoplasm, ovary, ultrasonography
in
Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology
volume
66
issue
2
pages
9 pages
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • scopus:105006797525
  • pmid:40418494
ISSN
0960-7692
DOI
10.1002/uog.29248
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
98442edb-2a7b-4325-82ec-5a389cb010a1
date added to LUP
2025-09-29 15:21:15
date last changed
2025-09-30 04:02:49
@article{98442edb-2a7b-4325-82ec-5a389cb010a1,
  abstract     = {{<p>Objective: To describe the clinical and ultrasound characteristics of serous and mucinous cystadenomas in the adnexa. Methods: This was a retrospective international multicenter study. Using the International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) database, patients with a histological diagnosis of serous or mucinous cystadenoma who had undergone preoperative ultrasound examination between 1999 and 2016 (IOTA studies phase 1, 1b, 2, 3 and 5) were identified. All masses were described using the standardized IOTA terminology. The diagnosis assigned by the original ultrasound examiner based on subjective assessment was recorded. Two reviewers assessed the available digital ultrasound images using pattern recognition to identify typical sonographic features of cystadenomas. Results: A total of 1318 patients were included: 687 (52.1%) with serous cystadenomas and 631 (47.9%) with mucinous cystadenomas. Based on the data recorded prospectively in the IOTA database, for serous cystadenomas the median diameter of the largest tumor was 68 (range, 14–320) mm. Most serous cystadenomas were described as unilateral (588/687 (85.6%)), with unilocular (274/687 (39.9%)) or multilocular (221/687 (32.2%)) morphology, and most had anechoic cyst content (508/687 (73.9%)). Most serous cystadenomas were not vascularized (color score of 1; 327/687 (47.6%)) or were poorly vascularized (color score of 2; 253/687 (36.8%)) on color Doppler examination. The original ultrasound examiner correctly classified 91.1% (626/687) of serous cystadenomas as benign and suggested the correct specific diagnosis in 51.5% (354/687) of tumors. For mucinous cystadenomas, the median diameter of the largest tumor was 93 (range, 12–550) mm. Most mucinous cystadenomas were described as unilateral (594/631 (94.1%)) with multilocular morphology (357/631 (56.6%)), and most manifested low-level echogenicity (334/631 (52.9%)). Most mucinous cystadenomas were poorly (color score of 2; 248/631 (39.3%)) or moderately (color score of 3; 194/631 (30.7%)) vascularized on color Doppler examination. The original ultrasound examiner correctly classified 87.5% (552/631) of mucinous cystadenomas as benign and suggested the correct specific diagnosis in 42.9% (271/631) of tumors. Based on pattern recognition (review of ultrasound images available for 433 tumors), the most typical sonographic features of serous cystadenomas were unilocular cyst (100/211 (47.4%)) or multilocular cyst with &lt; 10 cyst locules (71/211 (33.6%)), whereas the typical features of mucinous cystadenomas were multilocular cyst with &lt; 10 cyst locules (99/222 (44.6%)), unilocular cyst (78/222 (35.1%)) or multilocular cyst with &gt; 10 cyst locules (31/222 (14.0%)). A honeycomb nodule was found in some mucinous cystadenomas (31/222 (14.0%)) but was not found in serous cystadenomas. Conclusions: Serous and mucinous cystadenomas exhibit typical sonographic features, allowing ultrasound examiners to assign a correct specific diagnosis to most tumors. Recognizing the ultrasound features of cystadenomas and avoiding misdiagnosing them as malignant can help prevent surgery for these benign tumors in asymptomatic patients.</p>}},
  author       = {{Mascilini, F. and Moro, F. and Pasciuto, T. and Sladkevicius, P. and Froyman, W. and Jokubkiene, L. and Van Holsbeke, C. and Franchi, D. and Epstein, E. and Guerriero, S. and Chiappa, V. and Buonomo, F. and Kudla, M. J. and Alcázar, J. L. and Hochberg, L. and Ciccarone, F. and Quagliozzi, L. and Scambia, G. and Timmerman, D. and Valentin, L. and Testa, A. C.}},
  issn         = {{0960-7692}},
  keywords     = {{cystadenoma; ovarian neoplasm; ovary; ultrasonography}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{233--241}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology}},
  title        = {{Imaging in gynecological disease (28) : clinical and ultrasound characteristics of serous and mucinous cystadenomas in the adnexa}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/uog.29248}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/uog.29248}},
  volume       = {{66}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}