Vaginal cancer classification: Difference between revisions

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Types of vaginal cancer, in order of prevalence, include:
Types of vaginal cancer, in order of prevalence, include:


* ‘’‘Vaginal [[squamous cell carcinoma]]: ’‘’
* '''Vaginal [[squamous cell carcinoma]]: '''
:* Arises from the thin, flat [[squamous cell]]s that line the vagina. By far, the commonest accounts for 80-85% of primary vaginal malignancies, and presents in older individuals.
:* Arises from the thin, flat [[squamous cell]]s that line the vagina. By far, the commonest accounts for 80-85% of primary vaginal malignancies, and presents in older individuals.


Line 23: Line 23:


* '''Vaginal sarcoma: '''
* '''Vaginal sarcoma: '''
:* [[rhabdomyosarcoma]] in paediatric population, like [[Sarcoma botryoides]]
:* [[rhabdomyosarcoma]] in paediatric population, eg. [[Sarcoma botryoides]]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 15:09, 2 September 2015

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Vaginal cancer may be classified according to histopathology into squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, vaginal germ cell tumor, and vaginal sarcoma.


Types of vaginal cancer

Types of vaginal cancer, in order of prevalence, include:

  • Arises from the thin, flat squamous cells that line the vagina. By far, the commonest accounts for 80-85% of primary vaginal malignancies, and presents in older individuals.
  • ~15% second commonest subtype, presents in younger individuals and arising from the glandular (secretory) cells in the lining of the vagina that produce some vaginal fluids. Adenocarcinoma is more likely than squamous cell cancer to spread to the lungs and lymph nodes. It is found most often in women aged 30 or younger, and has been found in a small percent of women whose mothers in the 1950s used diethylstilbestrol to prevent threatened abortions.
  • Vaginal sarcoma:

References