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Doctor's
Digest: News on Natural Medicine
Urinary
incontinence and abdominal pain
are key symptoms of ovarian cancer
from
News-Medical in Women's Health News
Published: Thursday, 18-Nov-2004
Results
from an Olmsted Medical Center and Mayo Clinic study
analyzing symptoms recorded in the medical records
of ovarian cancer patients suggest ovarian cancer,
long considered asymptomatic until late-stage cancer
develops, does in fact have early symptoms, including
urinary incontinence and abdominal pain.
"Ovarian cancer is called 'the silent killer,'"
says Barbara Yawn, M.D., director of research at
Olmsted Medical Center and the study's lead investigator.
"We know now that there are symptoms, yet it
appears that women ignore them and physicians don't
recognize the potential urgency of evaluating the
symptoms."
The
most common symptom found in the records of the
107 ovarian cancer patients studied was crampy abdominal
pain. Abdominal pain and urinary urgency, frequency
or incontinence were the most commonly documented
symptoms in women who had Stage I and II, the early
stages, of ovarian cancer. In patients with Stages
III and IV cancer, the later stages, abdominal pain
and increased abdominal girth were the most commonly
documented symptoms. Fewer than 25 percent of the
symptoms would be considered unique to ovarian cancer
or related directly to the reproductive pelvic organs:
the uterus, fallopian tubes, cervix and ovaries.
The study found the following factors associated
with a longer time to diagnosis of patients' ovarian
cancer: delays in women seeking medical care, health
care system issues, competing medical conditions,
physicians' failure to follow up, and women not
returning for follow-up.
Brigitte
Barrette, M.D., a Mayo Clinic gynecologist and study
investigator, found the commonality of urinary leakage
symptoms among the ovarian cancer patients particularly
interesting. "My surprise with our findings
was at the urinary incontinence, because it's not
something that has been reported often," she
says. "Sudden or marked change in urinary leakage
was a symptom. So, incontinence problems that develop
over a period of just a few weeks are something
to pay attention to."
The
difficulty in differentiating symptoms of abdominal
pain and urinary incontinence as ovarian cancer
predictors lies in the many different diseases or
conditions to which these symptoms may point. "Many
of the symptoms are more common in other conditions,
such as irritable bowel syndrome or colon cancer,"
says Dr. Yawn.
Looking
for ovarian cancer is a bit like looking for a zebra
in a field of horses. "Someone can go to the
doctor with bloating, and usually the physician
will investigate for the common things," says
Dr. Barrette.
"It's
like when someone goes to the emergency room with
a headache. Most of the time, it's not a stroke.
But, that should be considered."
Due
to the fact that the symptoms identified in this
study can be indicative of many conditions, Drs.
Yawn and Barrette suggest that women and their doctors
be particularly alert to incontinence and abdominal
pain that do not improve with treatment. "When
a woman goes in to see her doctor with these abdominal,
urinary or pelvic symptoms and the tests for the
most common causes are negative, the workup needs
to continue," says Dr. Yawn. "Ovarian
cancer must be considered. If the symptoms persist
and there is not a clear reason, you need to look
further." At a minimum, the symptoms require
a pelvic examination with an ultrasound and a blood
test for ovarian cancer if they do not resolve or
do not have another very clear diagnosis within
weeks -- not months, agree Drs. Yawn and Barrette.
Another
barrier to catching ovarian cancer early is that
the cancer's progression is almost entirely in the
body's interior. "The diagnosis is so tricky
because there is room in the abdomen, and an ovary
can grow, form a big mass and progress without the
patient even noticing," says Dr. Barrette.
"You can't feel it from the outside -- it's
inside, and we in the medical community don't have
any screening test specifically for ovarian cancer."
Drs.
Yawn and Barrette indicate that the symptom of abdominal
pain most likely originates from pressure from the
tumor or from fluid in the abdomen prompted by the
tumor's presence. Urinary incontinence is most likely
due to the tumor's pressing on the bladder and causing
increased pressure within the abdomen, prompting
urine loss.
Dr.
Yawn explains that from the data collected in this
study, the investigators are unable to draw conclusions
about whether catching a patient's symptoms early
in the progression of ovarian cancer will make a
difference in the treatability of her cancer. Prior
studies addressed that issue.
"We
know if ovarian cancer is detected at an earlier
stage, the survival is about 90 percent; we know
that an early stage can make a difference,"
says Dr. Yawn. Dr. Barrette points out, however,
that ovarian cancer can progress from stage to stage
in a matter of months, making it far more aggressive
than malignancies such as breast cancer.
Ovarian
cancer occurs in 1 out of 70 women.
http://www.mayo.edu/
Click
here for a downloadable version (pdf) of this article.
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