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Age is an important factor, but not the only factor
“One of the primary reasons why more cases have been reported in the West is because of increased life expectancy. India is doing well in terms of life expectancy and changing lifestyles. More often these cases are reported among elderly post-menopausal women. However, there have been exceptions emerging lately where women in the younger age groups are reporting EC. Increasing number of women in the younger age group are diagnosed with endometrial cancer during infertility evaluation and treatment,” says Dr. Roopesh N, Lead Consultant –Gynecologic Onco-Surgeon, Lap / Robotic Surgeon and Peritoneal Oncology Specialist at SPARSH Hospital, Bengaluru
5 Other factors contributing to endometrial cancer
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2 Hormonal Factors: Prolonged exposure to estrogen without the balancing effect of progesterone, such as in PCOD, Hormone therapy for Breast cancer, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) or rarely certain ovarian tumors, increase the risk of endometrial cancer
3 Reproductive History: Women who have never been pregnant or have had fewer pregnancies are at higher risk
4 Genetics: A family history of endometrial or colorectal cancer, particularly in syndromes like Lynch syndrome, can elevate risk
5 Early age at menarche: Menarche is the first menstrual period, and when it occurs at a relatively younger age, it can increase the risk of developing endometrial cancer later in life.
Apart from these, sedentary lifestyle, diabetes, hypertension, infertility can also lead to endometrial cancer. Endometrial cancer generally has an excellent prognosis as it presents early and many of the subtypes are slow-growing. More than 70% of endometrial cancers present in stage 1 and hence are diagnosed early with highly successful outcomes.
Understanding the symptoms and diagnosis
Symptoms:
- Bleeding after menopause
- Irregular and heavy bleeding around menopause
- Abnormal vaginal discharge
- Lower abdominal pain (seldom)
- Trans-vaginal ultrasound
- MRI
- Endometrial biopsy (PIPELLE office biopsy)
- Surgery – The primary treatment is usually a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus), often along with the removal of fallopian tubes and ovaries (salpingo-oophorectomy). This can also include sentinel lymph node dissection and complete lymph node dissection. In early cancers after proper selection, fertility-sparing surgeries are feasible too.
- Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) – A major surgical procedure that aims to remove all visible cancer cells from the abdominal cavity and pelvis. This is considered only when the cancer is advanced but with limited peritoneal spread and is seldom considered.
- Radiation – Used as an adjunct to surgery, particularly in advanced cases.
- Chemotherapy – Utilized in advanced stages or when cancer has spread beyond the uterus.