Ovarian Cancer Waterville ME

In ovarian cancer, the cells of the ovary grow and divide uncontrollably. The cells may form a tumor on the ovary, parts of which can break off and spread to other parts of the body. Read on for more details. Click here to continue reading this article ...

Elena Lampros Nawfel, MD
207-872-1140
149 North St
Waterville, ME
Eugene M Beaupre, MD
207-623-8411
6 Eaton Dr
Waterville, ME
Michael Andrew Lacombe, MD
207-626-1196
6 E Chestnut St
Augusta, ME
Woondong Jeong
(207) 621-6100
361 Old Belgrade Rd
Augusta, ME
Donald G Magioncalda
(207) 621-6100
361 Old Belgrade Rd
Augusta, ME
Joseph Heinrich Lanzillo, MD
717-951-8846
217 Evergreen Dr
Waterville, ME
Joseph J Hiebel, MD
207-873-0423
11 Bartlett St
Waterville, ME
Donald G Magioncalda, MD
207-626-1305
6 E Chestnut St
Augusta, ME
Richard Alan Krull
(207) 621-6100
361 Old Belgrade Rd
Augusta, ME
Thomas J Keating
(207) 626-1157
6 E Chestnut St
Augusta, ME
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Ovarian Cancer

Article Medically Reviewed By:

Susan V. Temple, RN, MSN, AOCN

Past President, Society of Gynecologic Nurse Oncologists Seale, AL

Overview

What Is It?
In ovarian cancer, the cells of the ovary grow and divide uncontrollably. The cells may form a tumor on the ovary, parts of which can break off and spread to other parts of the body.

Ovarian cancer is the most fatal of all cancers involving a woman's reproductive tract. Most ovarian cancer develops after menopause; about two-thirds of ovarian cancers occur in women over age 55. Unfortunately, less than 20 percent of ovarian cancers are diagnosed at an early stage, when the disease is confined to the ovary and is most easily treated. Women diagnosed in the early stages have a 90 to 95 percent chance of surviving at least five years. About 75 percent of women with ovarian cancer survive one year after diagnosis, and 45 percent survive five years after being diagnosed. The survival rate drops as the stage of the cancer increases, with a less than 18 percent five-year survival rate in women whose cancer has spread beyond the abdomen. Younger women (below age 65) have a better five-year survival rate than older women.

An estimated 21,550 American women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2009, according to the American Cancer Society, and about 14,600 will die of the disease.

The ovaries are the part of the female reproductive organs that produce eggs every month during a woman's reproductive cycle. The ovaries are about the size and shape of an almond (1 1/2 inches long), but after menopause, they shrink to about half their original size. They are located on either side of the lower abdomen. Women who still have periods can develop cysts on the ovary, which can be felt on a pelvic exam or seen via x-rays or other tests. They are rarely cancerous, particularly in younger women.

Cysts are less common in women who have already gone through menopause. If cysts occur in these women, they're more likely to be cancerous. A cyst or an enlarged ovary in a woman who has gone through menopause should always be evaluated quickly to make sure it is not a cancer.

In ovarian cancer, the cells of the ovary grow and divide uncontrollably. The cells may form a tumor on the ovary, parts of which can break off and spread to other parts of the body.

Although ovarian cancer can spread throughout the body and affect other organs and systems (brain, lungs, breast and lymph nodes, for example), in most cases it stays in the abdomen and affects organs such as the intestines, liver and stomach.

There are three main types of ovarian cancer. Most cancers of the ovary (85 to 90 percent) come from the cells that make up the outer lining of the ovary and are called epithelial ovarian cancers. Although most epithelial ovarian cancers occur in women without a family history of the disease, about 10 to 15 percent of women with ovarian epithelial cancer have other family members who also had the same cance...

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