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Cervical Cancer – Definition, Causes, and Treatment.

Definition

Cervical cancer starts in the cells of the cervix. The cervix is the narrow, lower part of the uterus (or womb). It is the passageway that connects the uterus to the vagina. Before cervical cancer develops, the cells of the cervix start to change and become abnormal. Growths on the cervix can be benign (not cancer) or malignant (cancer). These abnormal cells are precancerous, meaning that they are not cancer.

Precancerous changes to the cervix are called dysplasia of the cervix (or cervical dysplasia). Dysplasia of the cervix is not cancer. It is a common precancerous change that can develop into cancer over time if it’s not treated. It’s important to know that most women with dysplasia do not develop cancer. Cervical cancer is almost always caused by a human papillomavirus (HPV) infection.

Structure of Cervix and the cancer affected area

The cervix

The cervix is part of a woman’s reproductive system. It’s in the pelvis. The cervix is the lower, narrow part of the uterus (womb).

The cervix is a passageway:

Historical background of cervical cancer

Dr Georges Papanicolaou’s screening method (the Pap smear) started in the US in the 1940s. It was widely used in the UK a decade later and a national programme of cervical screening was established in 1988. The association of sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) with cervical cancer was less readily accepted. The detection of HPV16 in cervical cancers at the end of the 1970s was aided by the explosion of laboratory, clinical, and public health research on new screening tests and procedures. These made possible the successful development, licensing and use of preventive vaccines against the major oncogenic HPV types, HPV16 and -18.

Epidemiology

Cervical cancer is the third most frequent cancer in women. In Europe, 10.6 women in 100,000 were diagnosed with cervical cancer in 2008. This is about 4% of all cancers diagnosed in women. Nearly 1% of all women develop cervical cancer over their lifetime in Europe.

Given the fact that a vaccine protecting against the most frequent types of human papilloma virus (HPV) involved in cervical cancer is now available, cervical cancer will likely become less frequent in the future.

The risk for cervical cancer is higher in Eastern Europe (especially in Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria and Lithuania) because of the lack of organised population-based screening programmes. Unfortunately, the situation is much bleaker in developing countries, where 85% of new cases occur.

Because of the frequent inaccessibility of screening and treatments the mortality rate is 10 times higher in developing countries than in developed countries. Moreover, presently, the cost of the prevention vaccination is such that it will likely remain unavailable for most women in many parts of the world.

Causes

Risk factors for being infected with HPV

Symptoms of Cervical cancer

The most common signs and symptoms of cervical cancer include:

How is cervical cancer diagnosed?

Cervical cancer must be suspected in the following circumstances:

The diagnosis of cervical cancer is based on the following examinations.

  1. Clinical examination
  1. The Pap smear test

Pap test

  1. Colposcopy

 

  1. Histopathological examination
  1. Routine laboratory examination of blood and urine
  1. Medical imaging examinations

Medical imaging examinations are used to verify the extension of the tumor and exclude or detect eventual metastases.

Staging and grading

Once a definite diagnosis of cancer has been made, the cancer is given a stage and a grade. The cancer stage describes the tumour size and tells whether it has spread. For cervical cancer, there are 5 stages.

Stage

Description

0

Cancer is found only in the top layer of cells in the tissue that lines the cervix. Stage 0 is also called carcinoma in situ.

1

Cancer is found only in the cervix, beneath the top layer of cells.

2

Cancer has spread to nearby tissues such as the upper part of the vagina or tissues next to the cervix.

3

Cancer has spread to the lower part of the vagina or the pelvic wall or blocks the ureter (the tube that carries urine from a kidney to the bladder). It may also have spread to nearby lymph nodes.

4

The cancer has spread to the bladder, rectum or other distant parts of the body

 

A grade is given based on how the cancer cells look and behave compared with normal cells. To find out the grade of a tumour, the biopsy sample is examined under a microscope. There are 3 grades for cervical cancer.

Grade

Description

1

Low grade – slow-growing, less likely to spread.

2

Moderate grade.

3

High grade – tend to grow quickly, more likely to spread.

Treatment for cervical cancer

Surgery

Radiation therapy

Chemotherapy

Common side effects of chemotherapy can include:

Biological therapy

Biological therapy (sometimes called immunotherapy) uses your immune system to fight cancer or to help control side effects of cancer treatments. Natural body substances or drugs made from natural body substances are used to boost your body’s own defences against illness.

Complementary therapies

Complementary therapies – for example, massage therapy or acupuncture – are used together with conventional cancer treatments, often to help ease tension and stress, as well as other side effects of treatment. They don’t treat the cancer itself.

Prevention of cervical cancer

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