Teratoma

20,690 views 19 slides Apr 29, 2015
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About This Presentation

Fetal medicine


Slide Content

Teratoma
20150424

Introduction
●due to abnormal differentiation of fetal germ cells that
arise from the fetal yolk sac
●Teratomas are typically found in the midline or gonads.
Sacrococcygeal - 40%
Ovary - 25%
Testicle - 12%
Brain - 5%
Other (including the neck and mediastinum) - 18%

Introduction
Teratomas have been reported to contain hair, teeth, bone
(rarely: eyes,torso,and hands, feet, or other limbs)
usually benign
mature/benign
immature/malignant
women
men
more commonly
95%
5%

Introduction
●Congenital (unknown: germ cells)
●nonseminomatous germ cell tumor (N.S.G.C.T.)
●abnormal development of pluripotent cells
●germ cells and embryonal cells
●ectoderm, endoderm, and mesoderm
germ cells testes or ovaries
embryonal cells Congenital
unknown

Mature teratoma
●grade 0 teratoma
●solid, cystic, or a combination
●skin, muscle, and bone
●generally benign



Dermoid cyst
Skin may surround a cyst and grow abundant hair

Dermoid cyst
●a cystic teratoma
●grows slowly and contains mature tissue
●always benign

rare malignant
in adult: squamous cell carcinoma
in infants and children: endodermal sinus tumor

Dermoid cyst
Ovarian dermoid cysts
●totipotential germ cells differentiated abnormally
●Complications: torsion, rupture and infection


Periorbital dermoid cysts
●in young children
●near the lateral aspect of the eyebrow
●can recur if not completely excised

Dermoid cyst
Spinal dermoid cysts
●benign ectopic growths of
neural tube closure
●lumbosacral region

Gonzalez-Crussi grading system
Grade 0
mature (benign)
Grade 1
immature, probably benign
Grade 2
immature, possibly malignant (cancerous)
Grade 3
frankly malignant
depends on amount of immature elements
<10%
10-50%
>50%
mature

Diagnosis
●Prenatal ultrasound
●Prenatal MRI
●“steal syndrome”
fetus' blood flow is redirected toward the teratoma

●AFP
Some teratomas contain yolk sac elements, which secrete AFP.

Introduction
The most commonly diagnosed fetal teratomas are
sacrococcygeal teratoma (Altman types I, II, and III) and
cervical (neck) teratoma.

Fetal Sacrococcygeal Teratoma
●the most common congenital germ cell tumor
●1 in 35,000-40,000
●female predominance (3:1-4:1 ratio)
●prenatally diagnosed: 30-50%
●36-41% require fetal intervention
●survival rate of prenatally diagnosed SCT is 47-83%
●50% have long-term morbidity
obstructive uropathy, bowel and bladder incontinence
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/2109544-overview#showall

Cervical teratoma
●1:20,000-40,000
●50% presence of calcification
●20-40% polyhydramnios
●hyper-extended to flexed towards a side
●neonatal airway obstruction
http://radiopaedia.org/articles/congenital-cervical-teratoma

Fetiform teratoma
●Fetus in fetu
●highly developed mature teratomas
●retroperitoneal teratomas


Teratoma theory
Parasitic twin theory

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetus_in_fetu

anencephalic

Case

http://www.nownews.com/n/2014/06/18/1282162

http://www.ettoday.
net/news/20140619/369401.htm

Treatment
●Surgery
non-invasive of surrounding tissues
●Chemotherapy
for malignant teratomas
●Follow-up

Introduction
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dermoid_cyst
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teratoma
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/939938-
overview#a0104
http://www.iap-ad.org/lectures/sudan/Germ%20cell%20tumours.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9qoohmd-kUM
http://en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/Sacrococcygeal_teratoma
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