What
You Need to Know about
Endometrial Cancer |
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Methods of Treatment
Most women with uterine cancer are treated with surgery.
Some have radiation therapy.
A smaller number of women may be treated with hormone
therapy or chemotherapy.
Another treatment option for women with uterine cancer is to take part in
treatment studies (clinical trials).
Such studies are designed to improve cancer treatment. (See Treatment
Studies for more information.) The following sections describe types of
uterine cancer treatment.
Surgery to remove the uterus (hysterectomy)
and the fallopian tubes and ovaries (bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy)
is the treatment recommended for most women with uterine cancer. Lymph
nodes near the tumor may also be removed during surgery to see if
they contain cancer. If cancer cells have reached the lymph nodes, it may
mean that the disease has spread to other parts of the body. If cancer cells
have not spread beyond the endometrium, the disease can usually be cured
with surgery alone.
These are some questions a woman may want to ask the doctor before having
surgery:
- What kind of operation will it be?
- How will I feel after the operation?
- If I have pain, how will you help?
- How long will I have to stay in the hospital?
- Will I have any long-term effects because of this operation?
- When will I be able to resume my normal activities?
- Will follow-up visits be necessary?
In radiation therapy (also called radiotherapy), high-energy rays
are used to kill cancer cells. The rays may come from a small container of
radioactive material, called an implant, which is placed directly into or
near the tumor site (internal radiation). It may also come from a large
machine outside the body (external radiation). Some patients with uterine
cancer need both internal and external radiation therapy. Like surgery,
radiation therapy is a local therapy.
It affects cancer cells only in the treated area. Radiation therapy may be
used in addition to surgery to treat women with certain stages of uterine
cancer. Radiation may be used before surgery to shrink the tumor or after
surgery to destroy any cancer cells that remain in the area. Also, for a
small number of women who cannot have surgery, radiation treatment is
sometimes used instead.
In internal radiation therapy, tiny tubes containing a radioactive
substance are inserted through the vagina and left in place for a few days.
The patient is hospitalized during this treatment. Patients may not be able
to have visitors or may have visitors only for a short period of time while
the implant is in place. Once the implant is removed, there is no
radioactivity in the body. External radiation therapy is usually given on an
outpatient basis in a hospital or clinic 5 days a week for several weeks.
This schedule helps protect healthy cells and tissue by spreading out the
total dose of radiation.
These are some questions a woman may want to ask the doctor before having
radiation therapy:
- What is the goal of treatment?
- How will the radiation be given?
- When will the treatments begin? When will they end?
- How will I feel during therapy? Are there side effects?
- What can I do to take care of myself during therapy?
- How will we know if the radiation therapy is working?
- Will I be able to continue my normal activities during treatment?
Hormone therapy is the use of drugs, such as progesterone, that
prevent cancer cells from getting or using the hormones
they may need to grow. Hormone treatment is a systemic
therapy. The drugs, which are usually taken by mouth, enter the
bloodstream, travel through the body, and control cancer cells outside the
uterus. Women who are unable to have surgery are sometimes treated with
hormone therapy. Also, this form of treatment is often recommended for women
who have metastatic or recurrent endometrial cancer.
These are some questions a woman may want to ask the doctor before having
hormone therapy:
- Why do I need this treatment?
- What hormones will I be taking? What will they do?
- Will I have side effects? What can I do about them?
- How long will I be on this treatment?
Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells. Anticancer
drugs may be taken by mouth or given by injection into a blood vessel or a
muscle. Like hormone therapy, chemotherapy is a systemic therapy; it can
kill cancer cells throughout the body. Chemotherapy is being evaluated in
treatment studies for patients with uterine cancer that has spread.
These are some questions a woman may want to ask the doctor before
starting chemotherapy:
- What is the goal of this treatment?
- What drugs will I be taking?
- Will the drugs cause side effects? What can I do about them?
- How long will I need to take this treatment?
- How will we know if the drugs are working?
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