Uterine
Cancer Treatment
Uterus cancer treatment
consists mainly of two local therapies: surgical therapy and radiotherapy, and two systematic therapies that
affect your entire organism: hormone therapy and chemotherapy.
Your doctor will use at
least one of the basic treatments (surgery, radiotherapy, hormone therapy and chemotherapy) to combat the
cancer. However, treatment used depends on your age, health status, location and stage of the cancer. Your
health care provider may use a combination of these treatments to increase your chance of
recovery.
Surgical treatment
Surgery is considered as
the essential treatment of uterine cancer; it is fairly the safest method to completely eliminate the cancer.
Depending on the stage of the cancer, your surgeon may perform a hysterectomy, removal of part or the entire
uterus; or a hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, removal of the uterus along with the vagina,
cervix, fallopian tubes and ovaries.
This is usually done
through an incision in the abdomen, under general anesthesia; the surgery requires hospital stay. Although this
method is new and less common, some surgeons have begun using the laparoscope for the detachment of the fallopian tubes and ovaries to complete the hysterectomy vaginally.
Whatever the method used to
perform the hysterectomy, you will not be able to get pregnant after your uterus has been removed; talk to your
surgeon if you plan to get pregnant in the future.
For a stage I uterine
cancer, surgery is sometimes the only treatment necessary. In advanced or metastatic uterine cancer, however,
chemotherapy, radiotherapy or hormone therapy can be associated.
Radiation Therapy (radiotherapy)
Treatment of a uterine
cancer diagnosed at stage II, III or IV, surgery must be followed by radiation therapy to destroy locally the
cancerous cells and reduce the risk of recurrence or metastasis. In rare cases, however, radiotherapy can be
administered before surgery in order to reduce the size of the tumor to facilitate its excision. Whether
performed before or after the surgery, internal or external radiotherapy will be used. In some cases, both methods can be practiced.
- External beam radiation therapy - this method involves projecting high-dose of
X-rays to the tumor to kill cancer cells. External radiation therapy is usually administered on an
outpatient basis, once a day, five days a week for several weeks.
- Internal Radiotherapy – during this procedure, small tube containing
radioactive material are inserted into your vagina for several hours to several days. The internal
radiation therapy always requires hospitalization.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy involves the
use of powerful chemical agents (drugs) to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy is used to treat uterine cancer if
the cancer is very aggressive (a cancer that spreads very quickly) or has spread beyond the
uterine. Chemotherapy drugs can be taken by mouth, infusion or
injection. In the treatment uterine cancer, however, chemotherapy drugs are usually administered
intravenously to navigate the bloodstream to reach all parts of the body. Your doctor may administer several
medications (polychemotherapy) at the same time to facilitate the destruction of the cancerous cells.
However, the chemotherapy
drugs attack both the tumor cells and normal cells, which can cause side effects. Side effects vary from one
person to another, from one drug to another. Most common adverse effects of chemotherapy medications used to
treat uterine cancer include:
- nausea
- low
blood cells count
- stomach
pain
- vomiting
- loss of
appetite
- temporary
hair loss
- increased
vulnerability to infections
- Fatigue.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy usually
involves taking synthetic progestin pills or gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists (GnRH agonist) to stop the
proliferation of the cancer cells. Hormone Therapy is most often used to treat advanced or recurrent uterine
cancers.
Uterine Cancer
Stages
Uterine Cancer Survival Rates
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