Florescent bony mass found during D&C....could it be cancer?
Comments
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If the results come back inconclusive,....
I have no idea what it could be, but I will tell you in my research that a cancerous polyp in the uterous or endometrium is often a papillary serous cancer, which is rare enough that they may not be able to identify it. I had to have the tissue slides from the polyp from my original D&C sent to a larger hospital that specializes in cancer in order to have a definitive pre-surgery diagnosis made. So if they can't make a conclusive diagnosis of whether it is cancerous or not, but they still find it highly suspicious, do not be complacent. The hospital can assist you in getting the slides sent out for a second opinion.
Even though she is having a hysterectomy either way, if there is reason to believe this may be cancer, she needs that surgery done by a gynecologic oncologist instead of the standard hysterectomy she would get from a gynecologist. No matter how much she likes her gynecologist, if you have ANY reason to believe this is cancer, dig in and insist on a gynecologic oncologist so that she won't have to have a second surgery to have her lymph nodes dissected if the pathology done on the larger tissue from her hysterectomy surprises everyone by being cancerous after all. That happens all the time, as many ladies here can attest to.
But hopefully this is NOT cancer. But those are my 2 urgent heartfelt suggestions. ((((Hugs)))0 -
Thank you so much for yourlindaprocopio said:If the results come back inconclusive,....
I have no idea what it could be, but I will tell you in my research that a cancerous polyp in the uterous or endometrium is often a papillary serous cancer, which is rare enough that they may not be able to identify it. I had to have the tissue slides from the polyp from my original D&C sent to a larger hospital that specializes in cancer in order to have a definitive pre-surgery diagnosis made. So if they can't make a conclusive diagnosis of whether it is cancerous or not, but they still find it highly suspicious, do not be complacent. The hospital can assist you in getting the slides sent out for a second opinion.
Even though she is having a hysterectomy either way, if there is reason to believe this may be cancer, she needs that surgery done by a gynecologic oncologist instead of the standard hysterectomy she would get from a gynecologist. No matter how much she likes her gynecologist, if you have ANY reason to believe this is cancer, dig in and insist on a gynecologic oncologist so that she won't have to have a second surgery to have her lymph nodes dissected if the pathology done on the larger tissue from her hysterectomy surprises everyone by being cancerous after all. That happens all the time, as many ladies here can attest to.
But hopefully this is NOT cancer. But those are my 2 urgent heartfelt suggestions. ((((Hugs)))
Thank you so much for your kind thoughts and prayers. Mom's appointment is late next week, so hopefully they will have the results by then. It just blows me away that the Dr. would say it was unlike anything he had seen before in his 27 years. Maybe you're right, that could mean it's the papillary serous (would that be smooth like a bone), and maybe my Dad misunderstood the part about being florescent, is that even possible for a mass to be florescent? Based on what I've read, it's appears that the papillary serous cancer is very dangerous and aggressive, without a good survival rate, is that right? It's amazing, my Mom goes for all her medical tests every year (pap test, mammmogram, etc.) and everything has always been fine. Her first symptoms for this was the light occasional postmenapausal bleeding about a month or so ago, is that usually an early symptom or could that mean this mass is far advanced? Thank you everyone for the kind support.0 -
My cancer is papillary serous (UPSC) & didn't look boney.Touchdown99 said:Thank you so much for your
Thank you so much for your kind thoughts and prayers. Mom's appointment is late next week, so hopefully they will have the results by then. It just blows me away that the Dr. would say it was unlike anything he had seen before in his 27 years. Maybe you're right, that could mean it's the papillary serous (would that be smooth like a bone), and maybe my Dad misunderstood the part about being florescent, is that even possible for a mass to be florescent? Based on what I've read, it's appears that the papillary serous cancer is very dangerous and aggressive, without a good survival rate, is that right? It's amazing, my Mom goes for all her medical tests every year (pap test, mammmogram, etc.) and everything has always been fine. Her first symptoms for this was the light occasional postmenapausal bleeding about a month or so ago, is that usually an early symptom or could that mean this mass is far advanced? Thank you everyone for the kind support.
Please don't start worrying about papillary serous cancer just yet. My papillary serous cancer was discovered in 2008, and I'm still here, so don't let what you read online scare you too much. Anything you read online that is older than 2009 or 2010 is totally dated and worthless as statistics; so many advances have happened since then.
I didn't mean to introduce a new worry!! I just want you to be aggressive about pursuing an answer if the results come back inconclusive because papillary serous cancer often starts as a polyp in the uterous and your mother had a polyp. And I wanted to stress how vital it will be to have a gynecologic oncologist do her hysterectomy if they are at all suspicious of cancer, as a gyne-onc takes out a LOT more tissue in a cancer-suspected hysterectomy than a gynecologist is used to removing, and if cancer is discovered by surprise during a routine hysterectomy it will require a second surgery if a gyne-onc isn't the one in there at the time.
But honestly, what you describe is completely unfamilar to me!! So it may be something COMPLETELY unrelated to cancer!! I so hope so! That is probably why no one else responded; what you describe is so unlike what any of our cancers looked like. Please take some comfort fromm that. It's probably not cancer at all.
& I missed your question anout the light postmenapausal bleeding. That is an early sign of uterine cancer but could be other things too. I myself had no symptoms at all, and was diagnosed Stage 3-c, so it's hard to correlate symptoms with cancer itself. Please try not to worry. As you learn things, please check back in and we will help you all we can. (((Hugs))))0 -
Thank you and I reallylindaprocopio said:My cancer is papillary serous (UPSC) & didn't look boney.
Please don't start worrying about papillary serous cancer just yet. My papillary serous cancer was discovered in 2008, and I'm still here, so don't let what you read online scare you too much. Anything you read online that is older than 2009 or 2010 is totally dated and worthless as statistics; so many advances have happened since then.
I didn't mean to introduce a new worry!! I just want you to be aggressive about pursuing an answer if the results come back inconclusive because papillary serous cancer often starts as a polyp in the uterous and your mother had a polyp. And I wanted to stress how vital it will be to have a gynecologic oncologist do her hysterectomy if they are at all suspicious of cancer, as a gyne-onc takes out a LOT more tissue in a cancer-suspected hysterectomy than a gynecologist is used to removing, and if cancer is discovered by surprise during a routine hysterectomy it will require a second surgery if a gyne-onc isn't the one in there at the time.
But honestly, what you describe is completely unfamilar to me!! So it may be something COMPLETELY unrelated to cancer!! I so hope so! That is probably why no one else responded; what you describe is so unlike what any of our cancers looked like. Please take some comfort fromm that. It's probably not cancer at all.
& I missed your question anout the light postmenapausal bleeding. That is an early sign of uterine cancer but could be other things too. I myself had no symptoms at all, and was diagnosed Stage 3-c, so it's hard to correlate symptoms with cancer itself. Please try not to worry. As you learn things, please check back in and we will help you all we can. (((Hugs))))
Thank you and I really appreciate your honesty and information. How are you doing with your cancer? I have a gut feeling that the findings are going to show cancer in my Mom, I just pray that it is a non-aggressive type and that it is in the very early stages. The light bleeding was the first and only symptom she had so I'm hoping that is a good sign. I'm going with her to her Dr. appointment next week, so I assume that's when we will know more. I hope I can hold it together for my Mom, no matter what the Dr. tells us.0 -
"I've never seen it before" can be good newsTouchdown99 said:Thank you so much for your
Thank you so much for your kind thoughts and prayers. Mom's appointment is late next week, so hopefully they will have the results by then. It just blows me away that the Dr. would say it was unlike anything he had seen before in his 27 years. Maybe you're right, that could mean it's the papillary serous (would that be smooth like a bone), and maybe my Dad misunderstood the part about being florescent, is that even possible for a mass to be florescent? Based on what I've read, it's appears that the papillary serous cancer is very dangerous and aggressive, without a good survival rate, is that right? It's amazing, my Mom goes for all her medical tests every year (pap test, mammmogram, etc.) and everything has always been fine. Her first symptoms for this was the light occasional postmenapausal bleeding about a month or so ago, is that usually an early symptom or could that mean this mass is far advanced? Thank you everyone for the kind support.
Just thought I would mention, once I had a funny growth in the roof of my mouth and my dentist scared me to death when he said he had never seen anything like it before. After he talked me down off the ceiling, he pointed out to me that dentists see oral cancer all the time, so the fact that it wasn't like something he'd seen before was actually good, not bad, news. I'm sure her doctor has seen cancer before, so it might be the same kind of "bad news but good news" situation.0 -
That's a good point. ItAderyn said:"I've never seen it before" can be good news
Just thought I would mention, once I had a funny growth in the roof of my mouth and my dentist scared me to death when he said he had never seen anything like it before. After he talked me down off the ceiling, he pointed out to me that dentists see oral cancer all the time, so the fact that it wasn't like something he'd seen before was actually good, not bad, news. I'm sure her doctor has seen cancer before, so it might be the same kind of "bad news but good news" situation.
That's a good point. It concerns me that no one seems to know anything about what this might be. My Dad, who met with the Dr. right after the D&C is now second-guessing himself and knows the Dr. said it was shiny and smooth "like a bone", but may not have said the mass was "hard". Although he couldnt remove it all for some reason so maybe it was hard. The comment about never seeing anything like this before in his career is really alarming to me. I'm hoping it's either not anything, or something in the early stages that can be taken care of.0
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