Uterine Cancer
Overview
UTERINE CANCER
Endometrial adenocarcinoma, or uterine cancer, is the most common genital cancer in women over forty-five years of age in the United States. Approximately 36,000 new cases are diagnosed each year, and 6,300 women ultimately die of the disease. The lifetime incidence is approximately 22 per 100,000. In over 90 percent of the cases, the earliest symptom is abnormal or postmenopausal bleeding. Almost 70 percent of uterine cancers are diagnosed early (while being confined to the uterus), and therefore are more apt to be cured. Uterine
THOMAS J. RUTHERFORD
(SEE ALSO: Cancer; Cervical Cancer)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists (1991). Carcinoma of the Endometrium. ACOG technical bulletin, no. 162. Washington, DC: Author.
Boronow, R. C.; Morrow, C. P. et al. (1984). "Surgical Staging in Endometrial Cancer: Clinicopathologic Findings of a Prospective Study." Obstetrics and Gynecology 63:825.





