Uterine Sarcoma: Risk Factors
What is a risk factor?
A risk factor is anything that may increase your chance of having a disease. Risk
factors for a certain type of cancer might include smoking, diet, family history,
or many other things. The exact cause of someone’s cancer may not be known. But risk
factors can make it more likely for a person to have cancer.
Things you should know about risk factors for cancer:
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Risk factors can increase a person's risk, but they don't always cause the disease.
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Some people with one or more risk factors may never develop cancer. Other people with
cancer have no known risk factors.
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Some risk factors are very well known and others are not. There's ongoing research
about risk factors for many types of cancer.
Some risk factors, such as family history, may not be in your control. But others
may be things you can change. Knowing about cancer risk factors can help you make
choices that might lower your risk. For instance, if an unhealthy diet is a risk factor,
you may choose to eat healthy foods. If excess weight is a risk factor, your healthcare
provider may help you lose weight.
Who is at risk for uterine sarcoma?
Risk factors for uterine sarcoma include:
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Radiation therapy to the pelvis. People who had radiation treatment for another cancer in the pelvis are at higher
risk for uterine sarcoma. Radiation damages healthy cells, which may make cancer develop
later. When cancers do start because of this exposure, it tends to happen 5 to 25
years after the radiation treatment.
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Having had retinoblastoma. This is a type of eye cancer caused by an abnormal gene. People who have had it are
at higher risk for uterine sarcoma.
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Taking the medicine tamoxifen. People who take tamoxifen to treat or prevent breast cancer may have an increased
risk for uterine sarcoma. It develops most often 2 to 5 years after starting tamoxifen.
Your healthcare provider will recommend that you get regular exams and screenings
if you are taking this medicine.
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Family history of kidney cancer. Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer is a rare family cancer syndrome.
It can increase the risk for uterine sarcoma.
What are your risk factors?
Talk with your healthcare provider about your risk factors for uterine sarcoma and
what you can do about them. There are no screening tests for uterine sarcoma for women
who don’t have symptoms. But regular pelvic exams and Pap tests can help find problems.
If your healthcare provider thinks you are at high risk, you might be checked for
uterine sarcoma in one of these ways:
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Endometrial sampling. Your healthcare provider takes a small sample of cells from the lining of your uterus.
This sample is also called an endometrial biopsy. It can usually be done in the healthcare
provider's office. To do it, your provider puts a thin flexible tube through your
vagina and cervix and into your uterus. Suction is then used to take out some cells
through this tube. The cells are sent to a lab and checked for cancer. Another test
called a dilation and curettage is sometimes used to take larger endometrial samples.
This is usually done in the operating room. Medicines are used to make you sleep and
not feel pain. Endometrial sampling is not as good at finding uterine sarcoma as it
is for finding endometrial cancer.
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Transvaginal ultrasound. A wand-like probe is put into your vagina to do this test. The probe sends out sound
waves that echo off the walls of your uterus and other pelvic organs. A computer turns
these sound waves into images on a screen. In this way, your healthcare provider can
see pictures of the inside of your uterus and the muscle wall of the uterus. The pictures
may show if there's a tumor.
These tests are not always accurate. It’s possible that your healthcare provider may
not be able to find cancer, even if it’s there. It’s also possible that it might look
like you have cancer when you don’t. If needed, more tests might be done to be sure.