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Cervical cancer

Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 2012
Standard treatment for invasive cervical cancer involves either radical surgery or radiotherapy. Childbearing is therefore impossible after either of these treatments. A fertility-sparing option, however, by radical trachelectomy has been shown to be effective, provided that strict criteria for selection are followed.
Jayanthi S, Lea, Ken Y, Lin
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Cervical cancer

The Lancet, 2019
Each year, more than half a million women are diagnosed with cervical cancer and the disease results in over 300 000 deaths worldwide. High-risk subtypes of the human papilloma virus (HPV) are the cause of the disease in most cases. The disease is largely preventable. Approximately 90% of cervical cancers occur in low-income and middle-income countries
Paul A, Cohen   +3 more
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Cervical Cancer

Southern Medical Journal, 1987
This conference concerns economic, psychosocial, preventive, and medical aspects of the care of an indigent, unemployed, 22-year-old mother of three who died of an invasive, large cell, nonkeratinizing cervical cancer 35 months after her last Pap smear, 19 months after the onset of vaginal discharge, 12 months after consulting a physician, 10 months ...
J R, van Nagell   +5 more
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Cervical cancer

Cancer Nursing Practice, 2016
Essential facts In the UK in 2013 there were about 3,200 new cases of cervical cancer. It is the 12th most common cancer in UK women, resulting in 890 deaths in 2014. Deaths in England are more common in women living in the most deprived areas.
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Cervical Cancer

Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, 2013
These NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology for Cervical Cancer focus on early-stage disease, because it occurs more frequently in the United States. After careful clinical evaluation and staging, the primary treatment of early-stage cervical cancer is either surgery or radiotherapy.
Wui-Jin, Koh   +26 more
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Cervical Cancer Staging

The Cancer Journal, 2003
The "International Classification of the Stages of Carcinoma of the Uterine Cervix" dates back to 1950; since then, seven changes have been made to the staging system for cervical cancer (almost all were made to Stage I), the most recent being in 1995.
PECORELLI, Sergio, ODICINO, Franco
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Cervical Cancer

Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2006
Worldwide, cervical cancer is the second most common malignancy in women and a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Until recently, the greatest strides in reducing cervical cancer mortality have occurred with the advent and implementation of screening programs. Many important advances have also taken place in the diagnosis and treatment of cervical
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Early cervical cancer

Current Treatment Options in Oncology, 2000
Early cervical cancer includes a broad range of disease, from clinically undetectable microinvasive cancer to large, bulky tumors that replace the entire cervix. Further subgrouping of this category is therefore necessary to define the optimal treatment approach for individual cases.
K H, Lu, T W, Burke
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Cervical cancer

The Lancet, 2003
Cervical cancer is a serious health problem, with nearly 500000 women developing the disease each year worldwide. Most cases occur in less developed countries where no effective screening systems are available. Risk factors include exposure to human papillomavirus, smoking, and immune-system dysfunction. Most women with early-stage tumours can be cured,
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Screening for cervical cancer

The Lancet, 1998
World-wide, there are estimated to be almost half a million new cases and a quarter of a million deaths from cervical cancer each year, accounting for about 10% of all female cancers (Parkin, 2001) and making cervix cancer the second commonest cancer among women, being exceeded only by breast cancer (Table 1). The cumulative incidence rate up to age 74
J, Cuzick, C J, Meijer, J M, Walboomers
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