4.4 Review

Redefining the origin and evolution of ovarian cancer: a hormonal connection

Journal

ENDOCRINE-RELATED CANCER
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages R411-R422

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/ERC-16-0209

Keywords

ovarian cancer; ovulation; menopause; gonadotrophin hypothesis

Funding

  1. Sands Family Foundation
  2. Debra Levin Endowment Fund
  3. [R01CA199004-01]

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Ovarian cancer has the highest mortality of all female reproductive cancers. Late diagnosis, tumour heterogeneity and the development of chemoresistance contribute to this statistic and work against patient survival. Current studies have revealed novel concepts that impact our view on how ovarian cancer develops. The greatest impact is on our understanding that, as a disease, ovarian cancer has multiple cellular origins and that these malignant precursors are mostly derived from outside of the ovaries. In this review, we propose a new concept of a step-wise developmental process that may underwrite ovarian tumorigenesis and progression: (1) migration/recruitment to the ovaries; (2) seeding and establishment in the ovaries; (3) induction of a dormant cancer stage; and (4) expansion and tumor progression. We will discuss the relationship of each step with the changing ovarian function and milieu during the reproductive age and the subsequent occurrence of menopause. The realization that ovarian cancer development and progression occurs in distinct steps is critical for the search of adequate markers for early detection that will offer personalized strategies for prevention and therapy.

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