Vulva and Vagina tumors: an overview
2007-02-01 Roberta Vanni  , Giuseppina Parodo   Affiliation1.Dip. Scienze e Tecnologie Biomediche, Sezione di Biologia e Genetica, Università di Cagliari, Cittadella Universitaria, 09142 Monserrato (CA), Italy
Classification
Note
Classification
VULVA NEOPLASIA:
I. Epithelial neoplasms
A. Squamous and related Tumors and precursors
1. Squamous cell carcinoma not otherwise specified
2. Basal cell carcinoma
3. Squamous intraepithelial neoplasia
4. Benign squamous lesions
B. Glandular Tumors
1. Paget disease
2. Bartholin gland Tumors: carcinomas, adenoma and adenomyoma
3. Tumor arising from specialized ano-genital mammary-like glands
4. Adenocarcinoma of Shene gland origin
5. Adenocarcinoma of other types
6. Adenoma of minor vestibular glands
7. Mixed Tumors of the vulva
8. Tumors of skin appendage origin
II. Soft tissue Tumors
1. Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (sarcoma botryoides)
2. Leiomyosarcoma
3. fibrous histiocytoma
4. Proximal epithelioid sarcoma
5. Alveolar soft part sarcoma
6. Liposarcoma
7. Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans
8. Deep angiomyxoma
9. Superficial angiomyxoma
10. Angiomyofibroblastoma
11. Cellular angiofibroma
12. Leiomyoma
13. Granular cell Tumor
14. Other
III. Melanocytic Tumors
1. Malignant melanoma
2. Congenital melanocytic naevus
3. Acquired melanocytic naevus
4. Blue naevus
5. Atypical melanocytic naevus of genital type
6. Dysplastic melanocytic naevus
IV. Miscellaneous Tumors
1. Yolk sac Tumor
2. Merkel cell Tumor
3. Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal Tumor/Ewing sarcoma
V. Haematopoietic and lymphoid Tumors
1. Malignant lymphoma
2. Leukemia
VI. Secondary tumors
VAGINA NEOPLASIA:
I. Epithelial neoplasms
A. Squamous Tumors and precursors
1. Squamous cell carcinoma not otherwise specified
2. Squamous intraepithelial neoplasia
3. Benign squamous lesions (condyloma acuminatum, squamous papilloma, fibroepithelial polyp)
B.Glandular lesions
1. Adenocarcinoma, NOS
2. Clear cell adenocarcinoma
3. Endometrioid adenocarcinoma
4. Mucinous adenocarcinoma
5. Mesonephric adenocarcinoma
6. Mullerian papilloma
7. Adenoma not otherwise specified
C.Other epithelial Tumors
1. Adenosquamous carcinoma
2. Adenoid cystic carcinoma
3. Adenoid basal carcinoma
4. Carcinoid
5. Small cell carcinoma
6. Undifferentiated carcinoma
II. Mesenchymal Tumors
1. Sarcoma botryoides
2. Leiomyosarcoma
3. Endometrioid stromal sarcoma, low grade
4. Undifferentiated vaginal sarcoma
5. Alveolar soft part sarcoma
6. Leiomyoma
7. Deep angiomyxoma
8. Post-operative spindle nodule
III. Mixed epithelial and mesenchymal Tumors
1. Carcinosarcoma (Malignant Mullerian Mixed tumors; metaplastic carcinoma)
2. Adenosarcoma
3. Malignant mixed Tumors resembling synovial sarcoma
4. Benign mixed Tumors
IV. Melanocytic Tumors
1. Malignant melanoma
2. Blue naevus
3. Melanocytic naevus
V. Miscellaneous Tumors
A. Tumor of germ cell type
1. Yolk sac Tumor
2. Dermoid Cyst
B. Others
1. Peripheral primitive neuroectodermal Tumor/Ewing sarcoma
2. Adenomatoid Tumor
3. Malignant lymphoma
4. Granulocytic sarcoma
VI Secondary Tumors
Clinics and Pathology
Note
Etiology
Malignant lesions of the vulva
Malignant lesions of the vagina
Epidemiology
Clinics
Vulva. Major symptoms are: painless bleeding unrelated to the menstrual cycle, appearing of vulvar skin white and rough.
Vagina. Major symptoms are painless vaginal bleeding (65-80% of all cases), difficult or painful urination, pain in the pelvic area. Mainly post-menopausal women (70%) are affected. Many vulvar or vaginal growths are not neoplastic and may be treated by monitoring or simple excision. Suspicious growths require diagnostic biopsy and in case of cancer diagnosis surgical ablation is mandatory.
Pathology
Treatment
Vagina. According to the FIGO, a vaginal lesion arises solely from the vagina : a vaginal lesion involving the external os of the cervix should be considered cervical cancer, and a tumor involving both vulva and vagina should be considered vulvar cancer, and they should be treated as such. Radiotherapy is the most commonly used treatment for cancer of the vagina. Indication for diverse surgical interventions (radical hysterectomy, total or subtotal vaginectomy, vulvectomy, inguinal lymphadenectomy, etc), often accompained by radiation therapy, depends on the lesion type, stage, location, size and patient¹s history.
Prognosis
Vagina. The histologic type, size (Tumors less than 4cm seem to be associated with a significantly better survival rate), stage and grade and location of the tumor influence the survival rate. The overall 5-year survival rate is about 61% , with about 54% survivig for 10 years or more.
Cytogenetics
Cytogenetics morphological
Cytogenetics molecular
CGH profiles are also confirmatory: chromosome imbalance with gains from the long arm of chromosome 3,5,8,9 and losses from the 11q have been frequently observed. A comparison between papillomavirus-negative and papillomavirus-positive vulvar cancer indicated that chromosome 8q was more commonly gained in the positive cases.
Genes Involved and Proteins
Note
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 11953825 | 2002 | Genetic aberrations detected by comparative genomic hybridisation in vulvar cancers. | Allen DG et al |
| 14984963 | 2004 | A polymorphism of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist plays a prominent role within the interleukin-1 gene cluster in vulvar carcinogenesis. | Grimm C et al |
| 16965956 | 2006 | A clonal translocation (7;8)(p13;q11.2) in a leiomyoma of the vulva. | Horton E et al |
| 12939741 | 2003 | Cytogenetic characterization of tumors of the vulva and vagina. | Micci F et al |
| 10326597 | 1999 | Karyotypic findings in tumors of the vulva and vagina. | Teixeira MR et al |
| 10782405 | 2000 | Primary vulvar and vaginal extraosseous Ewing's sarcoma/peripheral neuroectodermal tumor: diagnostic confirmation with CD99 immunostaining and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. | Vang R et al |
| 10963386 | 2000 | A case of dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans of the vulva with a COL1A1/PDGFB fusion identical to a case of giant cell fibroblastoma. | Vanni R et al |
Citation
Roberta Vanni ; Giuseppina Parodo
Vulva and Vagina tumors: an overview
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2007-02-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/solid-tumor/5274/vulva-and-vagina-tumors-an-overview
