Complications Of Vaginal Cancer

 You’ll likely have a pelvic exam and a Pap smear (Pap test). If your provider finds abnormal cells, you may need further tests, like a colposcopy and a vaginal biopsy. A biopsy is the only test that can confirm a cancer diagnosis.

 Pelvic exam: Your provider will visually inspect your vulva and insert two fingers inside your vagina to feel for any abnormalities. They’ll use a tool called a speculum to widen your vagina so that it’s easier to see your vaginal canal and cervix.

 Pap smear: While holding your vagina open with a speculum, your provider will use a spatula-like tool and a brush to scrape cells from your cervix. These cells will get tested in a lab for signs of cancer or HPV.

 Colposcopy: In this procedure, your doctor uses a lighted instrument called a colposcope to look for abnormal cells in your vagina and cervix.

 Biopsy: A biopsy often accompanies colposcopy. Your provider will take a tissue sample that will be sent to a lab and tested for cancer cells.

 Staging allows your provider to determine how advanced your cancer is. Vaginal cancer is staged in three ways, based on how far the tumor has progressed in your vagina, whether it has spread to your lymph nodes, and whether it has spread to other parts of your body. These three categories are called T (tumor), N (nodes), and M (whether it has spread, or metastasized).

 Your provider can stage your cancer by using information from the test results and by performing procedures that allow them to see inside your body.

 Imaging procedures used to stage cancer include X-rays, computerized tomography (CT) scans, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans. MRIs provide details about a tumor’s size. PET scans can show abnormal lymph nodes.

 Cystoscopy can show if cancer has spread to your bladder. A small lighted tube with a camera is inserted into your bladder for this procedure.

Does Vaginal Cancer Affect Fertility

 Proctoscopy can show if cancer has spread to your small intestine or rectum. A small lighted tube with a camera is inserted into your rectum for this procedure.

 Treatment for vaginal cancer depends on the type of cancer, cancer stage, and your age. Depending on your age, your treatment may also depend on whether you’d like to have children.

 In general, laser surgery and topical treatments are used to treat precancerous cells. Invasive vaginal cancer will often require surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. You may receive a variety of treatments.

 Wide local excision: Your healthcare provider removes the tumor along with some of the healthy tissue surrounding it.

 Vaginectomy (partial or radical): Your provider removes all or part of your vagina depending on tumor size and location. Depending on how far the cancer has spread, your provider may recommend removing your lymph nodes (lymph node dissection) and your uterus and cervix (hysterectomy).

 Pelvic exenteration: This surgery removes multiple organs from your pelvis, including the bottom part of your colon (rectum), bladder, uterus, cervix, vagina, ovaries and nearby lymph nodes. Your provider will make an opening in your abdomen that will allow you to pee and poop (called a stoma or ostomy bag). This type of surgery may be an option if you have recurring cancer.

 Radiation uses targeted energy beams, like X-rays, to destroy cancer cells or keep them from dividing.

 External radiation therapy: A machine outside your body directs beams of high-energy radiation at your tumor.

 Internal radiation therapy: Sealed wires or catheters containing radioactive material are placed inside your vagina, either into or near the tumor.

 Chemotherapy uses drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy alone isn’t an effective treatment for vaginal cancer, but it may be used alongside radiation to enhance its effectiveness. Sometimes, chemotherapy is used to treat tumors that disappear with treatment and later return.

 Your provider may recommend you take part in a clinical trial to try new cancer treatments in development. The American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute are good resources for locating current clinical trials involving vaginal cancer treatments.

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