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[Diagnosis and management in pediatric patients with ovarian masses].

OBJECTIVE: Review of the diagnosis and management of ovarian masses in children, through the identification of preoperative risk factors of malignancy, the evaluation of surgical management and its results.

METHODS: Retrospective study in pediatric patients under 18 years old, managed surgically by ovarian masses. Analyzed data were symptoms, imagining, tumor markers, treatment, outcomes and pathology. The primary endpoint was ovarian malignancy.

RESULTS: We identified 54 patients with ovarian masses between 2014 and 2017, of which 49 were benign and 5 malignant; The malignant ovarian masses were significantly larger than the benign, with an average of 19.4 cm vs 6.49 cm (p = 0.0001); had greater solid component in the imaging and positive tumor markers (p = 0.001) and were treated with oophorectomy plus tumor staging surgery. Forty-three patients with benign tumors underwent ovarian preservation surgery. The postoperative follow-up of all the patients was on average 3.4 months (1-25 months) and 20.3% presented pelvic pain associated with alterations of the menstrual cycle in their postoperative control. There are no reports of recurrence or contralateral ovarian tumor.

CONCLUSIONS: Large masses with solid components and positive tumor markers were significant predictors of malignancy. Minimally invasive ovarian preserving surgery should be considered as the first treatment option in masses with low risk of malignancy. On the other hand, oophorectomy plus tumor staging surgery should be considered for ovarian tumors with a high risk of malignancy.

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