| Booklet: What You Need to Know about
Cervical Cancer |
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Precancerous Conditions and Cancer of the Cervix
Cells on the surface of the cervix sometimes appear abnormal but not
cancerous. Scientists believe that some abnormal changes in cells on the
cervix are the first step in a series of slow changes that can lead to
cancer years later. That is, some abnormal changes are precancerous;
they may become cancerous with time.
Over the years, doctors have used different terms to refer to abnormal
changes in the cells on the surface of the cervix. One term now used is squamous
intraepithelial lesion (SIL). (The word lesion
refers to an area of abnormal tissue; intraepithelial
means that the abnormal cells are present only in the surface layer of
cells.) Changes in these cells can be divided into two categories:
- Low-grade SIL refers to early changes in the size, shape, and
number of cells that form the surface of the cervix. Some low-grade
lesions go away on their own. However, with time, others may grow larger
or become more abnormal, forming a high-grade lesion. Precancerous
low-grade lesions also may be called mild dysplasia
or cervical
intraepithelial neoplasia 1 (CIN 1). Such early changes in the
cervix most often occur in women between the ages of 25 and 35 but can
appear in other age groups as well.
- High-grade SIL means there are a large number of precancerous
cells; they look very different from normal cells. Like low-grade SIL,
these precancerous changes involve only cells on the surface of the
cervix. The cells will not become cancerous and invade deeper layers of
the cervix for many months, perhaps years. High-grade lesions also may
be called moderate or severe dysplasia,
CIN 2 or 3, or carcinoma in
situ. They develop most often in women between the ages of 30
and 40 but can occur at other ages as well.
If abnormal cells spread deeper into the cervix or to other tissues or
organs, the disease is then called cervical cancer, or invasive
cervical cancer. It occurs most often in women over the age of 40.
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