Cervical Cancer Case Study and Care Plan
Cervical Cancer
The following represents an outline for a plan of care, including information intended to educate the patient about what she can expect given her recent diagnosis of cervical cancer at the age of 45. The good news is that a cervical cancer diagnosis is no longer a death sentence.
Cervical cancer in women is common and afflicts close to 530,000 women worldwide each year (Colombo et al., 2012). Importantly, human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are believed to be the most important causative agent and this virus is detected in 99% of all cervical tumors. Accordingly, the expected protection rate conferred by the HPV vaccine is around 70%.
Of the three categories of cervical cancer recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO), squamous cell carcinoma is by far the most common, representing 70-80% of all cervical cancers (Colombo et al., 2013). Other types of cervical cancer include glandular (adenocarcinoma), neuroendocrine, undifferentiated, or mixed. The type of cancer is important because it impacts prognosis and plan of care, in addition to how advanced the disease is (stage), tumor size, patient age, and patient health (NCI, 2013).
Once cervical cancer has been diagnosed the first step is to stage the cancer (NCI, 2013). Of primary concern is whether the tumor is localized within the cervix, involves the whole cervix, or has spread to the surrounding tissues and lymph nodes. The Bethesda System for cervical cytology classification helps initiate this process by providing terminology standards for specimen quality, type of cervical cancer, and grade of lesion (Davey, 2003). A number of imaging tools are also available to help determine the extent of cancer spread within the cervix, surrounding tissue, and the rest of the body if metastatic disease is suspected (NCI, 2013).
Treatment Plan
As discussed above, staging is the first step towards developing a treatment plan. Either a computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will likely be performed to initially determine how big the tumor is and whether it has metastisized (Small et al., 2012). Additional imaging tests may need to be performed if the disease has spread beyond the cervix, including positron emission tomography (PET) or a combination of PET and CT. Such studies will be needed to stage the disease, determine whether surgery is appropriate, and guide surgeons should surgery be indicated (Querleu and Morrow, 2008). PET and CT…
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