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In This Topic
Gynecology and Obstetrics
Gynecologic Tumors
Vaginal Cancer
Symptoms and Signs
Diagnosis
Treatment
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Chapters in Gynecology and Obstetrics
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  • Vaginitis, Cervicitis, and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
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  • Benign Gynecologic Lesions
  • Pelvic Relaxation Syndromes
  • Sexual Dysfunction in Women
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  • Prenatal Genetic Counseling and Evaluation
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Topics in Gynecologic Tumors
  • Introduction to Gynecologic Tumors
  • Cervical Cancer
  • Endometrial Cancer
  • Fallopian Tube Cancer
  • Gestational Trophoblastic Disease
  • Ovarian Cancer
  • Uterine Sarcomas
  • Vaginal Cancer
  • Vulvar Cancer
     
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    Vaginal Cancer

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    Vaginal cancer is usually a squamous cell carcinoma, most often occurring in women > 60. The most common symptom is abnormal vaginal bleeding. Diagnosis is by biopsy. Treatment for many small localized cancers is hysterectomy plus vaginectomy and lymph node dissection; for most others, radiation therapy is used.

    Vaginal cancer accounts for 1% of gynecologic cancers in the US. Average age at diagnosis is 60 to 65. Risk factors include human papillomavirus infection and cervical or vulvar cancer. Exposure to diethylstilbestrol in utero predisposes to clear cell adenocarcinoma of the vagina, which is rare; mean age at diagnosis is 19.

    Most (95%) primary vaginal cancers are squamous cell carcinomas; others include primary and secondary adenocarcinomas, secondary squamous cell carcinomas (in older women), clear cell adenocarcinomas (in young women), and melanomas. The most common vaginal sarcoma is sarcoma botryoides (embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma); peak incidence is at age 3.

    Most vaginal cancers occur in the upper third of the posterior vaginal wall. They may spread by direct extension (into the local paravaginal tissues, bladder, or rectum), through inguinal lymph nodes from lesions in the lower vagina, through pelvic lymph nodes from lesions in the upper vagina, or hematogenously.

    Symptoms and Signs

    Most patients present with abnormal vaginal bleeding: postmenopausal, postcoital, or intermenstrual. Some also present with a watery vaginal discharge or dyspareunia. A few patients are asymptomatic, and the lesion is discovered during routine pelvic examination or evaluation of an abnormal Papanicolaou (Pap) test.

    Vesicovaginal or rectovaginal fistulas are manifestations of advanced disease.

    Diagnosis

    • Biopsy
    • Clinical staging

    Punch biopsy is usually diagnostic, but wide local excision is occasionally necessary. Cancers are staged clinically (see Table 8: Gynecologic Tumors: Vaginal Cancer by StageTables), based primarily on physical examination, endoscopy (ie, cystoscopy, proctoscopy), chest x-ray (for pulmonary metastases), and usually CT (for abdominal or pelvic metastases). Survival rates depend on the stage.

    Table 8

    PrintOpen table Open table in new window
    Vaginal Cancer by Stage

    Stage

    Description

    5-yr Survival Rate*

    I

    Limited to the vaginal wall

    65−70%

    II

    Invading subvaginal tissues

    47%

    III

    Extending to the pelvic wall

    30%

    IV

    Extending beyond the true pelvis or involving the bladder or rectal mucosa

    15−20%

    *Prognosis is worse if the primary tumor is large or poorly differentiated.

    Treatment

    • Hysterectomy plus vaginectomy and lymph node dissection for tumors confined to the wall of the upper third of the vagina
    • Radiation therapy for most others

    Stage I tumors within the upper third of the vagina can be treated with radical hysterectomy, upper vaginectomy, and pelvic lymph node dissection. Most other primary tumors are treated with radiation therapy, usually a combination of external beam radiation therapy and brachytherapy. If radiation therapy is contraindicated because of vesicovaginal or rectovaginal fistulas, pelvic exenteration is done.

    Last full review/revision May 2013 by Pedro T. Ramirez, MD; David M. Gershenson, MD

    Content last modified May 2013

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