Serous papillary endometrial adenocarcinoma vs other uterine cancers
Even though I spend a lot of time researching this, I still can't get a good answer as to the differences between the differntent types. Some of you seem to have so much knowledge about this, hoping you good help me figure it out. My Cancer is the Serous Papillary Endometrial adenocarsinoma stage 4. High grade. Very aggressive. Some times I don't know why I even want to as it will not change anything, but knowing has much as I can seems o give comfort. Lou Ann
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Lou Ann, a few years ago I
Lou Ann, a few years ago I took a very good (free too) course given by the Foundation for Women's Cancer that was specific for Uterine cancers. Type 1 are typically "typical garden variety" types that can be treated with surgery and no additional treatment is needed. The Type II cancers are a subset and more agressive. They include the UPSC and a few others, and then there is the MMMT that is very agressive and is considered outside these two types.
I have the notes at my house, it was all very fascinating, and when I get the chance can either EDIT this post with my notes to clarify or repost something if the EDIT button is missing.
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Thank youNoTimeForCancer said:Lou Ann, a few years ago I
Lou Ann, a few years ago I took a very good (free too) course given by the Foundation for Women's Cancer that was specific for Uterine cancers. Type 1 are typically "typical garden variety" types that can be treated with surgery and no additional treatment is needed. The Type II cancers are a subset and more agressive. They include the UPSC and a few others, and then there is the MMMT that is very agressive and is considered outside these two types.
I have the notes at my house, it was all very fascinating, and when I get the chance can either EDIT this post with my notes to clarify or repost something if the EDIT button is missing.
I would find that very interesting . for some reason it is helpful and encourageing to know as much as I can about this cancer.
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Lou Ann, I could no longer
Lou Ann, I could no longer EDIT my post and had to start a new reply. Like you, as aggressive as this cancer is, I do want to know more about it. So here it goes:
Grade and Stage ae most important as well as the depth of invasion, size of tumor, spread to lymph nodes
There are two broad types of Uterine Cancer:
Type I: Estrogen dependent, it is more common (85%), younger women, it is well differentiated, favorable prognosis
Not very aggressive (tend to be Grade 1 or 2)
Frequently responds to hormonal therapy
Does not respond well to chemotherapy
Thought obesity may be part of the cause
Most patients are cured: hysterectomy and +/- radiation
Subtypes of Type I: Villoglandular, Mucinous, Squamous differentiation, Cilliated - all these tend to have excellent prognosis
Type II: Estrogen independent, less common (15%), Older women, poorly differentiated, less favorable prognosis
Very aggressive (automatically Grade 3)
Not very common
Sometimes has featurs that are called "Glassy Cell" cancer
Subtypes of Type II:
Serous - rarely responds to hormone therapy, can respond to chemo, metastasized early even with small volume, usually receives adjuvant therapy chemo/radiation
Closely resemble ovarian cancer and often found in advanced stages. Most recur even when confined to the uterus.
Clear Cell - does not repsonsd to hormone therapy, does not respond as readily to chemotherapy, in general more common in the far east/Asia
Closely resembles papillary serous, not associated with obesity, present in advanced stages, prognosis is better than papillary serous
Uterine Sarcomas - Cancers that form in the muscle of the uterus rather than the lining
Malignant Mixed Muellerian tumors (MMMT) - also called carcinosarcomas as they have to malignant components (glandular and stromal)
Leiomyosarcomas - arise in the muscle of the uterus which does not respond to radiation or chemo
Hope you fiind this helpful and please excuse typos. I typed this in.
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Thanks for the infoNoTimeForCancer said:Lou Ann, I could no longer
Lou Ann, I could no longer EDIT my post and had to start a new reply. Like you, as aggressive as this cancer is, I do want to know more about it. So here it goes:
Grade and Stage ae most important as well as the depth of invasion, size of tumor, spread to lymph nodes
There are two broad types of Uterine Cancer:
Type I: Estrogen dependent, it is more common (85%), younger women, it is well differentiated, favorable prognosis
Not very aggressive (tend to be Grade 1 or 2)
Frequently responds to hormonal therapy
Does not respond well to chemotherapy
Thought obesity may be part of the cause
Most patients are cured: hysterectomy and +/- radiation
Subtypes of Type I: Villoglandular, Mucinous, Squamous differentiation, Cilliated - all these tend to have excellent prognosis
Type II: Estrogen independent, less common (15%), Older women, poorly differentiated, less favorable prognosis
Very aggressive (automatically Grade 3)
Not very common
Sometimes has featurs that are called "Glassy Cell" cancer
Subtypes of Type II:
Serous - rarely responds to hormone therapy, can respond to chemo, metastasized early even with small volume, usually receives adjuvant therapy chemo/radiation
Closely resemble ovarian cancer and often found in advanced stages. Most recur even when confined to the uterus.
Clear Cell - does not repsonsd to hormone therapy, does not respond as readily to chemotherapy, in general more common in the far east/Asia
Closely resembles papillary serous, not associated with obesity, present in advanced stages, prognosis is better than papillary serous
Uterine Sarcomas - Cancers that form in the muscle of the uterus rather than the lining
Malignant Mixed Muellerian tumors (MMMT) - also called carcinosarcomas as they have to malignant components (glandular and stromal)
Leiomyosarcomas - arise in the muscle of the uterus which does not respond to radiation or chemo
Hope you fiind this helpful and please excuse typos. I typed this in.
Thank you for the information. I think it is good to know as much as posible about this thing that wants to control my life. Lou Ann
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Yes, thanksLou Ann M said:Thanks for the info
Thank you for the information. I think it is good to know as much as posible about this thing that wants to control my life. Lou Ann
Yes, thank you NoTimeforCancer for your clear differentiation of the various types of uterine cancer. (Even if it does remind me why my oncologist is so careful about regular surveillance of my UPSC, even though I am presently NED!)
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