Chapter 12 Uterine Cancer: Cancer
Chapter 12: Uterine cancer
Uterine cancer most often develops in the endometrium, the membrane that lines the inside of the uterus. For this reason, it is often called endometrial cancer. Although the cause of uterine cancer remains unknown, researchers believe that it develops when the uterus is exposed to too much estrogen and not enough progesterone - the two hormones involved in regulating the menstrual cycle.
Not surprisingly, many risk factors for uterine cancer in some way affect the level of estrogen that your uterus has been exposed to during your life. Among these factors are your age at menarche (first menstrual period), your age at menopause (last menstrual period), and whether you have used estrogen-only hormone therapy. About 95% of endometrial cancers develop in women age 40 or older; the average age at diagnosis is 60. Your risk increases if you started your periods before age 12 or underwent menopause after age 52, because this increases the number of years that your uterus has been exposed to estrogen. Your risk is higher if you have never given birth (because pregnancy alters hormone levels) or if you are obese (because fat converts other hormones into estrogen, effectively raising your estrogen level).
If you are taking tamoxifen to help reduce your risk of breast cancer, you do face a small increased risk of endometrial cancer. Taking hormone therapy after menopause should not increase your risk, as long as you are on a regimen that combines estrogen with progestin. If you have had breast or ovarian cancer in the past, or currently have diabetes, you are also at increased risk. Some families also carry genetic mutations that increase their risk, especially those related to hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer, but this is relatively rare.
| Last updated: | May 01, 2008 |
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Medical content reviewed by the Faculty of the Harvard Medical School. Harvard Health Publications, Copyright © 2007 by President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved. Used with permission of StayWell.
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