Ovarian hepatoid yolk sac tumour

Histopathology

Minor foci of hepatoid differentiation are seen in 16%-40% of ovarian yolk sac tumours, but solid yolk sac tumour with a predominant hepatoid pattern is extremely rare. Liver cells are observed to a lesser extend in other germ cell tumours, as well as in a few ovarian sex cord stromal tumours.

Immunohistochemistry

pancytokeratin

2/21

cytokeratin 7

0/21

cytokeratin 20

0/21

EMA

0/21

CEA (polyclonal)

2/2: strong canalicular pattern1

CEA (monoclonal)

0/21

HepPar-1

4/82

vimentin

0/21

inhibin

2/2: scattered cells1

oestrogen receptor

2/21

progesterone receptor

2/21

human chorionic gonadotrophin

0/21

alpha-fetoprotein

2/21

alpha-1-antitrypsin

2/21

albumin

1/21

   

Prognosis

Hepatoid yolk sac tumours of the ovary are highly aggressive.

References

1Devouassoux-Shisheboran, M., Schammel, D. P., Tavassoli, F. A. Ovarian hepatoid yolk sac tumours: morphological, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features. Histopathology 1999;34:462-469.

2Pitman M et al. Hepatocyte paraffin 1 antibody cannot distinguish primary ovarian malignancies with hepatoid differentiation from metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma. Mod Pathol 2002;15:206A.

 

This page last revised 24.12.2004.