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Cervical Cancer Cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in women under 35. In 2004, 1,093 women in the UK died from the disease. But precancerous changes in the cervix can be detected, allowing for prompt treatment.
What is it? Cancer of the cervix affects the cells lining the entrance to the womb.
About 2,800 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year in the UK. However, thanks to the cervical cancer screening programme, which checks 4.4 million women every year, the number of women being diagnosed has fallen by more than 40 per cent since 1988.
Cervical cancer develops in a series of precancerous changes, starting with mild abnormalities in the cells and progressing towards full cancer. Each year, about 24,000 women are found to have the most serious form of precancerous abnormalities (CIN 3 changes) when they have a cervical smear test.
By detecting these changes before cancer has become fully established, cervical screening now saves approximately 4,500 lives a year in England. As a result, the death rate has plummeted by 60 per cent in the past 30 years.
About 70 per cent of women treated for invasive cervical cancer are alive five years later, although survival rates are much higher when the disease is caught in its earlier stages.
Causes Exactly how cervical cancer develops isn't known, but it's most likely to result from a combination of triggers. Risk factors include:
Infection with certain types of human papilloma virus (HPV), but not the type that causes genital warts. HPV is found in about 95 per cent of cases of cervical cancer. A vaccine against HPV is licensed for use in the UK and may be added to the normal immunisation schedule so that girls can be protected against cervical cancer before they become sexually active.
Any factor that increases the risk of exposure to HPV, including having many sexual partners, first having sex at a young age and not using barrier contraceptives such as condoms.
Smokers are twice as likely to develop the disease as non-smokers because chemicals in cigarette smoke damage special cells in the cervix that normally fight the disease. For help and advice to give up smoking see our addictions section.
The contraceptive pill directly increases the risk by a very small amount. Not having a smear test. Almost half of all new cases of cervical cancer occur in women who've never had a smear test.
Symptoms The most common symptoms of cervical cancer include:
Bleeding between periods or after sex, or new bleeding after the menopause Unpleasant smelling vaginal discharge Discomfort/pain during intercourse
Any of these symptoms may have causes other than cervical cancer, but it is important to get them checked by your GP, even if you've attended your routine cervical smear test.
The doctor responds... "I've just been diagnosed with precancerous cells in my cervix"
Diagnosis All women aged 20 to 64 who've had sexual intercourse should have a smear test every three to five years. This can be taken by a doctor or nurse at your GP's surgery, family planning clinic or well woman clinic.
The NHS Cervical Screening Programme first invites a woman to have a smear test at the age of 25. After that, women are offered screening every three years until the age of 49, and then every five years until 64.
Women over 64 can stop having smear tests if the previous two in the past ten years were negative.
Smear tests detect the early changes of cervical cancer. This is a positive test. Sometimes all that's needed is to repeat the test a few months later to see if the abnormalities have healed.
However, most women will be offered further tests, in particular a colposcopy, where the doctor examines the cervix with a microscope to get a closer look at the cells and take a biopsy (rather like a more intensive smear test).
Treatment The treatment recommended will depend on the stage of the cancer, but generally aims to destroy or remove the abnormal cells. Treatments for precancerous changes include laser, cryotherapy (freezing), cone biopsy (removing a cone-shaped piece of tissue) and hysterectomy. In invasive cancer, radiotherapy and chemotherapy may be offered.
Have a look at to find out how your genetic make-up and lifestyle affect your chances of getting cervical cancer.
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