The pelvic mass. Patients' ages and pathologic findings.
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Pathologic findings in 100 women with pelvic masses revealed cancer in older women, endometriosis in middle-aged women, and teratomas in younger women, with malignancy more common and less aggressive in younger patients.
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Abstract
The pathologic findings on 100 women undergoing laparotomy for a pelvic mass between August 1983 and September 1986 were analyzed. The most frequent diagnoses by age group were: cancer in 56% of women greater than or equal to 50 years of age, endometriosis in 27% of women 31-49 years of age and benign cystic teratoma in 33% of women less than or equal to 30 years of age. A malignancy was present in 17 women; five (29%) of the tumors had low malignant potential. Pelvic masses proved to be malignant in 9 (56%) of 16 women greater than 50 years old as compared to 4 (10%) of 39 women less than 30 years old (P less than .01). Of the four malignant tumors in women less than or equal to 30 years of age, three (75%) had low malignant potential as compared to one of nine (11%) in women greater than or equal to 50 years of age (P = .05). This series gives the clinician some numbers on which to base diagnostic probability as it relates to age when evaluating the woman with a pelvic mass.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-06-11T06:19:48.454388+00:00
- openalex
- last seen: 2026-06-04T00:00:01.174412+00:00
- pubmed
- last seen: 2026-05-13T22:09:20.810540+00:00
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