Penn Gynocologic Oncology Care Newsletter
 

Winter 2007

Answers to Your Questions about Cervical Cancer

Recent Diagnosis – What Do I Do Next?

What is Cervical Cancer?

Causes of Cervical Cancer

Screening and Prevention Methods

Stages of Cervical Cancer

Treatment Options

Can I Survive?
Do You Need an HPV Test?
Now Available: The HPV Vaccine
HPV Vaccine - A New Direction in Cancer Prevention
 
Care Pages
 

Causes of Cervical Cancer

Exposure to the human papillomavirus (HPV), a common sexually transmitted disease, has been linked to cervical cancer. It is estimated that over 6 million people contract HPV annually in the United States. Most women never know they have HPV because their immune system suppresses the virus. Only a small percentage of women with HPV will develop cervical cancer.

Additional risk factors include:

  • High-risk sexual behavior – multiple sexual partners, becoming sexually active at an early age, sexual partners who have multiple partners, exposure to sexually transmitted diseases (chlamydia, HIV).
  • Women whose mothers took the drug DES (diethylstilbestrol) during pregnancy (in the early 1970s) to prevent miscarriage.
  • Long-term use of birth control pills (more than five years).
  • Poor economic status (unable to afford regular Pap smears).
  • Smoking.

The development of cervical cancer is very slow. It begins as a pre-cancerous condition called dysplasia which can be detected by having a Pap smear (a screening procedure that detects cervical changes before cancer develops). Early detection greatly improves the chances of successful treatment and prevents any early cervical cell changes from becoming cancerous.

Most cases of invasive cancer (cancer that spreads to other parts of the body) have been found in women who have not had a Pap smear in the last five years or have not followed up on abnormal Pap results. For this reason, it is crucial for women to receive regular pelvic examinations and Pap smears to detect cervical changes before cells become cancerous and spread to other parts of the body.

 


 

Need an appointment? Request one online 24 hours/day, 7 days/week or call 800-789-PENN (7366) to speak to a referral counselor.

 

Related Links
Find an Ob/Gyn
Request an Appointment Online or call
1-800-789-PENN (7366)
Penn Ob/Gyn Care:
Gynecologic Oncology
OncoLink®
Penn Gynecologic Cancers Newsletter

-

Current Issue

-

Archive

-

Subscribe Today!
RSS feed Newsletter RSS Feed
 
Penn Ob/Gyn Care Newsletters

Gynecologic Oncology

Pregnancy & Parenting

Women's Health

 

   
   

 

About UPHS   Contact Us   Site Map   Privacy Statement   Legal Disclaimer   Terms of Use

The University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia, PA 800-789-PENN © 2008, The Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania