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Ovarian Cancer
- By Site Admin
- Published 03/17/2008
- Ovarian Cancer
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For over 30 years, starting when I was old enough to begin to understand life, I have dealt with people suffering or trying to deal with various diseases and conditions, as I also suffered a long battle. I am not a doctor, I do not pretend to be one, what I am, is a caring person in real life. I hope anyone able to that stops by here will also donate some time to people in need of answers and a friendly chat. This site "Donations For Us" is about giving, donations are not only about money.
View all articles by Site AdminThe Ovaries
The ovaries are part of a woman's reproductive
system. They are in the pelvis. Each ovary is about the size of
an almond.
The ovaries make the female hormones - estrogen
and progesterone. They also release eggs. An egg travels from an ovary
through a fallopian tube to the womb (uterus).
When a woman goes through her "change of life" (menopause), her ovaries stop releasing eggs and make far lower levels of hormones.

Risk Factors
Doctors cannot always explain why one woman
develops ovarian cancer and another does not. However, we do know that women
with certain risk factors may be more likely than others to develop
ovarian cancer. A risk factor is something that may increase the chance of
developing a disease.
Studies have found the following risk factors for
ovarian cancer:
·
Family history of
cancer: Women who have a mother,
daughter, or sister with ovarian cancer have an increased risk of the disease.
Also, women with a family history of cancer of the breast, uterus, colon, or
rectum may also have an increased risk of ovarian cancer.
If several women in a
family have ovarian or breast cancer, especially at a young age, this is
considered a strong family history. If you have a strong family history of
ovarian or breast cancer, you may wish to talk to a genetic counselor.
The counselor may suggest genetic testing for you and the women in
your family. Genetic tests can sometimes show the presence of specific gene
changes that increase the risk of ovarian cancer.
·
Personal history of
cancer: Women who have had cancer of
the breast, uterus, colon, or rectum have a higher risk of ovarian cancer.
·
Age over 55: Most women are over age 55 when diagnosed with ovarian
cancer.
·
Never pregnant: Older women who have never been pregnant have an
increased risk of ovarian cancer.
·
Menopausal hormone
therapy: Some studies have suggested
that women who take estrogen by itself (estrogen without progesterone) for 10
or more years may have an increased risk of ovarian cancer.
Scientists
have also studied whether taking certain fertility drugs, using talcum powder,
or being obese are risk factors. It is not clear whether these are risk
factors, but if they are, they are not strong risk factors.
Having a
risk factor does not mean that a woman will get ovarian cancer. Most women who
have risk factors do not get ovarian cancer. On the other hand, women who do
get the disease often have no known risk factors, except for growing older.
Women who think they may be at risk of ovarian cancer should talk with their
doctor.
|
|
SymptomsEarly ovarian cancer may not cause obvious
symptoms. But, as the cancer grows, symptoms may include: ·
Pressure or pain in the
abdomen, pelvis, back, or legs ·
A swollen or bloated
abdomen ·
Nausea, indigestion, gas,
constipation, or diarrhea ·
Feeling very tired all the
time Less
common symptoms include: ·
Shortness of breath ·
Feeling the need to urinate
often ·
Unusual vaginal bleeding
(heavy periods, or bleeding after menopause) Most
often these symptoms are not due to cancer, but only a doctor can tell for
sure. Any woman with these symptoms should tell her doctor. |
Diagnosis
If you have a symptom that suggests ovarian
cancer, your doctor must find out whether it is due to cancer or to some other
cause. Your doctor may ask about your personal and family medical history.
You may have one or more of the following tests.
Your doctor can explain more about each test:
·
Physical exam: Your doctor checks general signs of health. Your doctor
may press on your abdomen to check for tumors or an abnormal buildup of fluid (ascites).
A sample of fluid can be taken to look for ovarian cancer cells.
·
Pelvic exam: Your doctor feels the ovaries and nearby organs for lumps
or other changes in their shape or size. A Pap test is part of a
normal pelvic exam, but it is not used to collect ovarian cells. The Pap test
detects cervical cancer. The Pap test is not used to diagnose ovarian
cancer.
·
Blood tests: Your doctor may order blood tests. The lab may check the
level of several substances, including CA-125. CA-125 is a substance
found on the surface of ovarian cancer cells and on some normal tissues. A high
CA-125 level could be a sign of cancer or other conditions. The CA-125 test is
not used alone to diagnose ovarian cancer. This test is approved by the Food
and Drug Administration for monitoring a woman's response to ovarian cancer
treatment and for detecting its return after treatment.
·
Ultrasound: The ultrasound device uses sound waves that people cannot
hear. The device aims sound waves at organs inside the pelvis. The waves bounce
off the organs. A computer creates a picture from the echoes. The picture may
show an ovarian tumor. For a better view of the ovaries, the device may be
inserted into the vagina (transvaginal ultrasound).
·
Biopsy: A biopsy is the removal of tissue or fluid to look for
cancer cells. Based on the results of the blood tests and ultrasound, your
doctor may suggest surgery (a laparotomy) to remove tissue
and fluid from the pelvis and abdomen. Surgery is usually needed to diagnose ovarian
cancer. To learn more about surgery, see the "Treatment" section.
Although
most women have a laparotomy for diagnosis, some women have a procedure known
as laparoscopy. The doctor inserts a thin, lighted tube (a laparoscope)
through a small incision in the abdomen. Laparoscopy may be used to remove a
small, benign cyst or an early ovarian cancer. It may also be used to learn
whether cancer has spread.
A pathologist
uses a microscope to look for cancer cells in the tissue or fluid. If ovarian
cancer cells are found, the pathologist describes the grade of the cells.
Grades 1, 2, and 3 describe how abnormal the cancer cells look. Grade 1 cancer
cells are not as likely as to grow and spread as Grade 3 cells.
Staging
To plan the best treatment, your doctor needs to
know the grade of the tumor (see Diagnosis) and the extent (stage) of the
disease. The stage is based on whether the tumor has invaded nearby tissues,
whether the cancer has spread, and if so, to what parts of the body.
Usually, surgery is needed before staging can be
complete. The surgeon takes many samples of tissue from the pelvis and abdomen
to look for cancer.
Your doctor may order tests to find out whether
the cancer has spread:
·
CT scan: Doctors often use CT scans to make pictures of organs and
tissues in the pelvis or abdomen. An x-ray machine linked to a
computer takes several pictures. You may receive contrast material by
mouth and by injection into your arm or hand. The contrast material helps the
organs or tissues show up more clearly. Abdominal fluid or a tumor may show up
on the CT scan.
·
Chest x-ray: X-rays of the chest can show tumors or fluid.
·
Barium enema x-ray: Your
doctor may order a series of x-rays of the lower intestine. You are
given an enema with a barium solution. The barium outlines the intestine on the
x-rays. Areas blocked by cancer may show up on the x-rays.
·
Colonoscopy: Your doctor inserts a long, lighted tube into the rectum
and colon. This exam can help tell if cancer has spread to the colon or rectum.
These are the stages of ovarian cancer:
·
Stage I: Cancer cells are found in one or both ovaries. Cancer
cells may be found on the surface of the ovaries or in fluid collected from the
abdomen.
·
Stage II: Cancer cells have spread from one or both ovaries to
other tissues in the pelvis. Cancer cells are found on the fallopian tubes, the
uterus, or other tissues in the pelvis. Cancer cells may be found in fluid
collected from the abdomen.
·
Stage III: Cancer cells have spread to tissues outside the pelvis or
to the regional lymph nodes. Cancer cells may be found on the outside of the
liver.
·
Stage IV: Cancer cells have spread to tissues outside the abdomen
and pelvis. Cancer cells may be found inside the liver, in the lungs, or in
other organs.
Treatment
Many women with ovarian cancer want to take an
active part in making decisions about their medical care. It is natural to want
to learn all you can about your disease and treatment choices. Knowing more
about ovarian cancer helps many women cope.
Shock and stress after the diagnosis can make it
hard to think of everything you want to ask your doctor. It often helps to make
a list of questions before an appointment. To help remember what your doctor
says, you may take notes or ask whether you may use a tape recorder. You may
also want to have a family member or friend with you when you talk to your
doctor-to take part in the discussion, to take notes, or just to listen.
You do not need to ask all your questions at once.
You will have other chances to ask your doctor or nurse to explain things that
are not clear and to ask for more details.
Your doctor may refer you to a gynecologic
oncologist, a surgeon who specializes in treating ovarian cancer.
Or you may ask for a referral. Other types of doctors who help treat women with
ovarian cancer include gynecologists, medical oncologists,
and radiation oncologists. You may have a team of doctors and nurses.
Getting a Second Opinion
Before starting treatment, you might want a second
opinion about your diagnosis and treatment plan. Many insurance companies cover
a second opinion if you or your doctor requests it.
It may take some time and effort to gather medical
records and arrange to see another doctor. In most cases, a brief delay in
starting treatment will not make treatment less effective. To make sure, you
should discuss this delay with your doctor. Sometimes women with ovarian cancer
need treatment right away.
There are a number of ways to find a doctor for a
second opinion:
·
Your doctor may refer you to
one or more specialists. At cancer centers, several specialists often work
together as a team.
·
A local or state medical society,
a nearby hospital, or a medical school can usually provide the names of
specialists.
·
The American Board of Medical
Specialties (ABMS) has a list of doctors who have had training and passed exams
in their specialty. You can find this list in the Official ABMS Directory
of Board Certified Medical Specialists. The Directory is in most public
libraries. Also, ABMS offers this information at http://www.abms.org. (Click on
"Who's Certified.")
·
NCI provides a helpful fact
sheet called "How To Find a Doctor or Treatment Facility If You Have
Cancer."
Treatment Methods
Your
doctor can describe your treatment choices and the expected results. Most women
have surgery and chemotherapy. Rarely, radiation therapy is
used.
Cancer
treatment can affect cancer cells in the pelvis, in the abdomen, or throughout
the body:
·
Local therapy: Surgery and radiation therapy are local therapies. They
remove or destroy ovarian cancer in the pelvis. When ovarian cancer has spread
to other parts of the body, local therapy may be used to control the disease in
those specific areas.
·
Intraperitoneal
chemotherapy: Chemotherapy can be
given directly into the abdomen and pelvis through a thin tube. The drugs
destroy or control cancer in the abdomen and pelvis.
·
Systemic chemotherapy: When chemotherapy is taken by mouth or injected into a
vein, the drugs enter the bloodstream and destroy or control cancer throughout
the body.
You may
want to know how treatment may change your normal activities. You and your
doctor can work together to develop a treatment plan that meets your medical
and personal needs.
Because
cancer treatments often damage healthy cells and tissues, side effects
are common. Side effects depend mainly on the type and extent of the treatment.
Side effects may not be the same for each woman, and they may change from one
treatment session to the next. Before treatment starts, your health care team
will explain possible side effects and suggest ways to help you manage them.
You may
want to talk to your doctor about taking part in a clinical trial, a research
study of new treatment methods. Clinical trials are an important option for
women with all stages of ovarian cancer
|
You may want to ask your doctor these questions
before your treatment begins: ·
What is the stage of my
disease? Has the cancer spread from the ovaries? If so, to where? ·
What are my treatment
choices? Do you recommend intraperitoneal chemotherapy for me? Why? ·
Would a clinical trial be
appropriate for me? ·
Will I need more than one
kind of treatment? ·
What are the expected
benefits of each kind of treatment? ·
What are the risks and
possible side effects of each treatment? What can we do to control side
effects? Will they go away after treatment ends? ·
What can I do to prepare
for treatment? ·
Will I need to stay in the
hospital? If so, for how long? ·
What is the treatment
likely to cost? Will my insurance cover the cost? ·
How will treatment affect
my normal activities? ·
Will treatment cause me to
go through an early menopause? ·
Will I be able to get
pregnant and have children after treatment? ·
How often should I have
checkups after treatment? |
Surgery
The
surgeon makes a long cut in the wall of the abdomen. This type of surgery is
called a laparotomy. If ovarian cancer is found, the surgeon removes:
·
both ovaries and fallopian
tubes (salpingo-oophorectomy)
·
the uterus (hysterectomy)
·
the omentum (the
thin, fatty pad of tissue that covers the intestines)
·
nearby lymph nodes
·
samples of tissue from the
pelvis and abdomen
If the
cancer has spread, the surgeon removes as much cancer as possible. This is
called "debulking" surgery.
If you
have early Stage I ovarian cancer, the extent of surgery may depend on whether
you want to get pregnant and have children. Some women with very early ovarian
cancer may decide with their doctor to have only one ovary, one fallopian tube,
and the omentum removed.
You may
be uncomfortable for the first few days after surgery. Medicine can help
control your pain. Before surgery, you should discuss the plan for pain relief
with your doctor or nurse. After surgery, your doctor can adjust the plan if
you need more pain relief.
The time
it takes to heal after surgery is different for each woman. You will spend
several days in the hospital. It may be several weeks before you return to
normal activities.
If you
haven't gone through menopause yet, surgery may cause hot flashes, vaginal
dryness, and night sweats. These symptoms are caused by the sudden loss of
female hormones. Talk with your doctor or nurse about your symptoms so that you
can develop a treatment plan together. There are drugs and lifestyle changes
that can help, and most symptoms go away or lessen with time.
|
You may want to ask your doctor these questions
about surgery: ·
What kind of surgery do you
recommend for me? Will lymph nodes and other tissues be removed? Why? ·
How soon will I know the results
from the pathology report? Who will explain them to me? ·
How will I feel after
surgery? ·
If I have pain, how will it
be controlled? ·
How long will I be in the
hospital? ·
Will I have any long-term
effects because of this surgery? ·
Will the surgery affect my
sex life? |
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy
uses anticancer drugs to kill cancer cells. Most women have chemotherapy for
ovarian cancer after surgery. Some women have chemotherapy before surgery.
Usually,
more than one drug is given. Drugs for ovarian cancer can be given in different
ways:
·
By vein (IV): The drugs can be given through a thin tube inserted into
a vein.
·
By vein and directly
into the abdomen: Some women get IV
chemotherapy along with intraperitoneal (IP) chemotherapy. For IP chemotherapy,
the drugs are given through a thin tube inserted into the abdomen.
·
By mouth: Some drugs for ovarian cancer can be given by mouth.
Chemotherapy
is given in cycles. Each treatment period is followed by a rest period. The
length of the rest period and the number of cycles depend on the anticancer
drugs used.
You may
have your treatment in a clinic, at the doctor's office, or at home. Some women
may need to stay in the hospital during treatment.
The side
effects of chemotherapy depend mainly on which drugs are given and how much.
The drugs can harm normal cells that divide rapidly:
·
Blood cells: These cells fight infection, help blood to clot,
and carry oxygen to all parts of your body. When drugs affect your blood cells,
you are more likely to get infections, bruise or bleed easily, and feel very
weak and tired. Your health care team checks you for low levels of blood cells.
If blood tests show low levels, your health care team can suggest medicines
that can help your body make new blood cells.
·
Cells in hair roots: Some drugs can cause hair loss. Your hair will grow back,
but it may be somewhat different in color and texture.
·
Cells that line the digestive tract:
Some drugs can cause poor appetite, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, or mouth and
lip sores. Ask your health care team about medicines that help with these
problems.
Some
drugs used to treat ovarian cancer can cause hearing loss, kidney damage, joint
pain, and tingling or numbness in the hands or feet. Most of these side effects
usually go away after treatment ends.
.
|
You may want to ask your doctor these questions
about chemotherapy: ·
When will treatment start?
When will it end? How often will I have treatment? ·
Which drug or drugs will I
have? ·
How do the drugs work? ·
Do you recommend both IV
and IP (intraperitoneal) chemotherapy for me? Why? ·
What are the expected
benefits of the treatment? ·
What are the risks of the
treatment? What side effects might I have? ·
Can I prevent or treat any
of these side effects? How? ·
How much will it cost? Will
my health insurance pay for all of the treatment? |
Radiation Therapy
Radiation
therapy (also called radiotherapy) uses high-energy rays to kill cancer cells.
A large machine directs radiation at the body.
Radiation
therapy is rarely used in the initial treatment of ovarian cancer, but it may
be used to relieve pain and other problems caused by the disease. The treatment
is given at a hospital or clinic. Each treatment takes only a few minutes.
Side
effects depend mainly on the amount of radiation given and the part of your
body that is treated. Radiation therapy to your abdomen and pelvis may cause
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or bloody stools. Also, your skin in the treated
area may become red, dry, and tender. Although the side effects can be
distressing, your doctor can usually treat or control them. Also, they
gradually go away after treatment ends.
Supportive Care
Ovarian cancer and its treatment can lead to other
health problems. You may receive supportive care to prevent or control these
problems and to improve your comfort and quality of life.
Your health care team can help you with the
following problems:
·
Pain: Your doctor or a specialist in pain control can suggest
ways to relieve or reduce pain.
· Swollen ab