Endometrioid cancer is the most common type of adenocarcinoma. Cells in the glands that appear much like the normal uterine lining or endometrium make up these endometrioid cancers.
It is in the endometrium, the uterus(womb) inner lining, where endometrial cancer begins. More about the endometrium and uterus:
Hormones cause the endometrium to change, during the menstrual cycle of a woman. Prior to the ovaries releasing an egg (ovulation), during the early part of the cycle, hormones called estrogens are produced by the ovaries. So that if a pregnancy occurs it could nourish an embryo, estrogen causes the endometrium to thicken.
Estrogen is produced in much lower amounts should there be no pregnancy, and made after ovulation is more of the hormone known as progesterone. This helps to prepare the lining’s innermost layer to shed. At the cycle’s end, shedding from the uterus and becoming the menstrual flow (period) is the endometrial lining. Until the woman goes through menopause (change of life), this cycle continues to repeat. This should give you an idea of what is endometrial cancer and how exactly it originates in the body.
The uterus’s two main types of cancer are:
Based on how the cells under the microscope look (histologic types), endometrial carcinomas can be divided into different types. These include:
Squamous cells, which are thin, flat cells found on the cervix outer surface, are contained in some of these cancers, as well as glandular cells. An adenocarcinoma with squamous differentiation is what cancer with both types of cells is known as.
The tumor may be called an adenoacanthoma, if the glandular cells under the microscope look cancerous, but the squamous cells do not. Should both the glandular cells and the squamous cells appear malignant(cancerous), adenosquamous(or mixed cell) is what these tumors may be called. Endometrioid cancers have other variants(or sub-types) such as villoglandular adenocarcinoma, ciliated carcinoma, and secretory carcinoma.
Less common types of endometrial adenocarcinomas are papillary serious adenocarcinoma, mucinous adenocarcinoma, and clear-cell carcinoma. As opposed to most endometrial cancers, these sorts have a tendency to be quite a bit more aggressive. They often spread at the time of diagnosis outside the uterus, and they tend to grow very quickly.
Cancers that spread to the body of the uterus after beginning in the cervix are different from those which begin the uterus body; they are described in Cervical Cancer.
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