Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.

Endosalpingiosis, traditionally regarded as an incidental pathological finding, was recently reported to have an association with gynecologic malignancies. To determine the prevalence of endosalpingiosis, we evaluated all benign appearing adnexal lesions using the Sectioning and Extensively Examinin...

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Main Authors: Jan Sunde, Morgan Wasickanin, Tiffany A Katz, Emily L Wickersham, D O Emilie Steed, Novae Simper
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232487
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spelling doaj-9b8eb8b788dc4f369b900e0756b3ab492021-03-07T05:30:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01155e023248710.1371/journal.pone.0232487Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.Jan SundeMorgan WasickaninTiffany A KatzEmily L WickershamD O Emilie SteedNovae SimperEndosalpingiosis, traditionally regarded as an incidental pathological finding, was recently reported to have an association with gynecologic malignancies. To determine the prevalence of endosalpingiosis, we evaluated all benign appearing adnexal lesions using the Sectioning and Extensively Examining-Fimbria (SEE-Fim) protocol, and queried the pathology database for the presence of endosalpingiosis, gynecologic malignancy, endometriosis, Walthard nests, and paratubal cysts. Using the SEE-Fim protocol, the prevalence of endosalpingiosis, endometriosis, Walthard nests, and paratubal cysts were 22%, 45%, 33%, and 42% respectively, substantially higher than previously reported. All lesions were observed to increase with age except endometriosis which increased until menopause then decreased dramatically. Among specimens including ovarian tissue, the prevalence of implantation of at least one lesion type was ubiquitous in patients age 51 and older (93%). The clinical significance of endosalpingiosis should be a continued area of research with larger trials assessing prevalence, factors affecting incidence, and association with malignancy. Our findings contribute to elucidating the origin of ectopic lesions and gynecologic disease risk.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232487
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Sunde
Morgan Wasickanin
Tiffany A Katz
Emily L Wickersham
D O Emilie Steed
Novae Simper
spellingShingle Jan Sunde
Morgan Wasickanin
Tiffany A Katz
Emily L Wickersham
D O Emilie Steed
Novae Simper
Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jan Sunde
Morgan Wasickanin
Tiffany A Katz
Emily L Wickersham
D O Emilie Steed
Novae Simper
author_sort Jan Sunde
title Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
title_short Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
title_full Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
title_fullStr Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
title_sort prevalence of endosalpingiosis and other benign gynecologic lesions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Endosalpingiosis, traditionally regarded as an incidental pathological finding, was recently reported to have an association with gynecologic malignancies. To determine the prevalence of endosalpingiosis, we evaluated all benign appearing adnexal lesions using the Sectioning and Extensively Examining-Fimbria (SEE-Fim) protocol, and queried the pathology database for the presence of endosalpingiosis, gynecologic malignancy, endometriosis, Walthard nests, and paratubal cysts. Using the SEE-Fim protocol, the prevalence of endosalpingiosis, endometriosis, Walthard nests, and paratubal cysts were 22%, 45%, 33%, and 42% respectively, substantially higher than previously reported. All lesions were observed to increase with age except endometriosis which increased until menopause then decreased dramatically. Among specimens including ovarian tissue, the prevalence of implantation of at least one lesion type was ubiquitous in patients age 51 and older (93%). The clinical significance of endosalpingiosis should be a continued area of research with larger trials assessing prevalence, factors affecting incidence, and association with malignancy. Our findings contribute to elucidating the origin of ectopic lesions and gynecologic disease risk.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232487
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