When gynecologic cancer strikes younger women: Maureen Wagner's daughter probably saved her life. The 33-year-old was pregnant with her first child in 2002 when she abruptly went into labor five weeks early.That early delivery led to the discovery of what doctors thought was an ovarian cyst. It turned out to be cancer, and when her daughter was five-months old, Ms. Wagner underwent a full hysterectomy and said goodbye to her dreams of carrying another child. Although most gynecologic cancers strike women in mid-life and beyond, they can affect women at any age, even infants. For instance, 11 percent of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer are under 65, (16) while nearly half of all cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed before age 35. (17) Endometrial cancer in premenopausal pre·me·no·paus·al adj. Of or relating to the years or the stage of life immediately before the onset of menopause. premenopausal adjective women is rarer, with just 2.9 percent of endometrial cancers occurring in women under 40. (18) A diagnosis of gynecologic cancer is devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. to any woman, but particularly to young women still in their childbearing years, experts say. That's because the primary treatment for most gyn cancers is hysterectomy and/or fertility-destroying radiation and chemotherapy. Additionally, if the ovaries Ovaries The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones. Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma ovaries (ō´v are removed, a woman is plunged into surgical menopause. But younger women have more options today than their mothers did 30 years ago. The use of menopausal hormone therapy--considered critical for women who undergo surgical menopause--can help with the abrupt withdrawal of estrogen and other hormones that comes with the loss of ovaries and uterus. Additionally, advances in surgical and assisted reproductive technology Assisted reproductive technology (ART) is a general term referring to methods used to achieve pregnancy by artificial or partially artificial means. It is reproductive technology used in infertility treatment, which is the only application routinely used today of , as well as a better understanding of the various treatment options of these cancers, provide more alternatives for preserving or protecting fertility in younger women today. For instance, endometrial cancer can sometimes be treated medically, with progestin progestin /pro·ges·tin/ (-jes´tin) progestational agent. pro·ges·tin n. 1. A natural or synthetic progestational substance that mimics some or all of the actions of progesterone. , rather than surgically. And younger women diagnosed with ovarian cancer may be able to have just one ovary ovary, ductless gland of the female in which the ova (female reproductive cells) are produced. In vertebrate animals the ovary also secretes the sex hormones estrogen and progesterone, which control the development of the sexual organs and the secondary sexual removed, instead of both. Plus, younger women tend to have rarer forms of ovarian cancer, called germ cell or stromal Stromal A type of tissue that is associated with the support of an organ. Mentioned in: Wilms' Tumor ovarian cancer, which are fairly responsive to chemotherapy and may not require a hysterectomy, says Thomas J. Herzog, MD, who directs the division of gynecologic oncology at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons College of Physicians and Surgeons: see Columbia Univ. in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . In cervical cancer, a relatively new procedure called a radical trachelectomy, may be performed. In this procedure, the surgeon removes most of the cervix and tissue around it, preserving the uterus for a later pregnancy. Even if the uterus and cervix are removed, sometimes the ovaries can be spared, says Carolyn Y. Muller, MD, associate professor of gynecologic oncology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Promising assisted reproductive techniques such as egg retrieval and embryo freezing may provide new options for women diagnosed with gynecologic cancers who still want to have a biological child of their own. (19,20) A woman diagnosed with cervical cancer, for instance, might be able to freeze her eggs, then later use in-vitro fertilization to create an embryo that a surrogate mother could carry. None of these options was available for Ms. Wagner. Instead, she had to learn to cope overnight with menopause, care for an infant while undergoing chemotherapy, and battle her employer for time off to take care of herself. That's another issue older women may not have to face, she says: work issues. "When it costs your workplace so much money in insurance costs because of your treatment, they may not want you working there," she says. Ms. Wagner eventually left the job she held when she was first diagnosed, and today works as director of corporate support for a PBS PBS in full Public Broadcasting Service Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural, television station in Chattanooga, TN. And while she mourns the loss of the additional biological children she'll never have, she's eternally grateful to the daughter she is raising, whom she named "Valerie." The name was carefully chosen for its meaning, explains Ms. Wagner: healthy and strong. |
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