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Uterine Cancer Causing Abdominal Pain

Introduction

Certainly, uterine cancer can cause abdominal pain in women. Uterine cancer is also called “uterus cancer” or “endometrial cancer” is truly a very common cancer in women, it ranks 4th after cancer of the breasts, colorectal cancer and cancer of the lung. Notably, among gynecological cancers uterine cancer is the most common cancer.

As it arises out of the lining of the uterus (medically termed “endometrium”) the medical term used by physicians is mostly”endometrial cancer”. The majority of cases are among postmenopausal women in the age group between 50 and 60.

Symptoms of Uterine Cancer

Almost all women with uterine cancer (=endometrial cancer) have irregular or abnormal periods. Warning signs are, if a woman before menopause develops very heavy bleeding around the regular period time or a woman who has been in the menopause is starting to have menstrual bleeding again.A significant percentage of women with postmenopausal bleeding will have endometrial cancer, which will require surgery. A vaginal discharge in a postmenopausal woman is another danger signal, as this may be the first sign of a lesion inside the uterus, which is leaking serum or blood. The family physician or the gynecologist will likely do an endometrial biopsy. He/she does this right at the office. It has a diagnostic accuracy rate of more than 90%. Another technique, which the gynecologist is using in case of doubt, is a fractional dilatation and curettage (=fractional D&C).

With this method the patient needs to be put under a general anesthetic in a hospital operating room and a scraping is made separately from the lining of the cervical canal and from the lining of the uterus (two fractions, hence the name “fractional D&C”). Usually the gynecologist will also perform a hysteroscopy. This is an endoscope (=fiberoptic instrument) that visualizes the inside of the uterine cavity. With this combination of techniques the gynecologist should be able to diagnose 100% of all the uterine cancers. The gynecologist may want to include some other tests such as a pelvic CT scan, blood tests, chest X-ray, ECG and others to help in the staging of the disease and in preparation for surgery.

Treatment

Treatment for uterine cancer is most successful, when the doctor diagnoses the cancer early on in the disease. If the cancer has not spread beyond the uterus, the 5-year survival rate after abdominal hysterectomy is 65% to 95% (stage I has higher rates).

Let us assume the uterine cancer is invading the neighboring structures such as the cervix, vagina, bladder and rectum. In this case and when the cancer invades the pelvic lymph glands (stage III and IV) , the 5-year survival rate goes down to 10% to 55%. The gynecologist treats stage I uterine cancer (local disease) with a total hysterectomy with removal of both ovaries (=bilateral “salpingo-oophorectomy”). In high risk situations (late stage II cases and higher) where invasion may be more than perhaps originally anticipated, the surgeon will do a radical hysterectomy with a wide abdominal incision so that adequate exploration of the abdominal organs can be done. The surgeon will remove the uterus, both ovaries, all lymph glands in the pelvis, the lymph gland chain along the aorta and sample lymph glands in other areas of the abdominal cavity.

Later, when the patient is recovering from the surgery, the pathology report will come back. The surgeon can explain to the patient the stage of the at the time of surgery. In case there was no further metastasis found on further pathological analysis, no further action would be required following the radical surgery. If there are positive lymph nodes (meaning that they contained cancer cells), then the appropriate further therapy such as radiotherapy or chemotherapy can be done. There are several cytotoxic drugs that are effective against uterine cancer: doxorubicin, cisplatin and paclitaxel.

For more detail on uterine cancer, click on this link.

References

1. DM Thompson: The 46th Annual St. Paul’s Hospital CME Conference for Primary Physicians, Nov. 14-17, 2000, Vancouver/B.C./Canada

2. C Ritenbaugh Curr Oncol Rep 2000 May 2(3): 225-233.

3. PA Totten et al. J Infect Dis 2001 Jan 183(2): 269-276.

4. M Ohkawa et al. Br J Urol 1993 Dec 72(6):918-921.

5. Textbook of Primary Care Medicine, 3rd ed., Copyright © 2001 Mosby, Inc., pages 976-983: “Chapter 107 – Acute Abdomen and Common Surgical Abdominal Problems”.

6. Marx: Rosen’s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice, 5th ed., Copyright © 2002 Mosby, Inc. , p. 185:”Abdominal pain”.

7. Feldman: Sleisenger & Fordtran’s Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease, 7th ed., Copyright © 2002 Elsevier, p. 71: “Chapter 4 – Abdominal Pain, Including the Acute Abdomen”.

8. Ferri: Ferri’s Clinical Advisor: Instant Diagnosis and Treatment, 2004 ed., Copyright © 2004 Mosby, Inc.

9. Suzanne Somers: “Breakthrough” Eight Steps to Wellness– Life-altering Secrets from Today’s Cutting-edge Doctors”, Crown Publishers, 2008

Last modified: August 28, 2018

Disclaimer
This outline is only a teaching aid to patients and should stimulate you to ask the right questions when seeing your doctor. However, the responsibility of treatment stays in the hands of your doctor and you.