FINAL CervicalCA7B
FINAL CervicalCA7B
FINAL CervicalCA7B
Learning Objectives:
1. To be able to diagnose patients with cervical cancer.
2. To be able to list the necessary diagnostic/laboratory examinations necessary for the
diagnosis of cervical cancer.
3. To be able to discuss an appropriate plan of management for cervical cancer.
General Data: The patient is D.L., 34 years old, college undergraduate, right-handed
Roman Catholic, married, housewife from Mandaluyong City.
Past Medical History: She has no history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, cancer,
tuberculosis, bronchial asthma, or allergies. She has no history of hospitalizations, surgeries,
or trauma.
Family Medical History: Her father had cancer. She has no family history of no
hypertension, diabetes mellitus, tuberculosis, bronchial asthma, cardiovascular disease, liver
disease.
Menstrual History: D.L. had her menarche at 16 years old. Her menses occur at regular
monthly intervals usually lasting for 4 days soaking up to 3 pads per day. She does not
experience dysmenorrhea with her menses. Her last menstrual period was on February 18,
2015. Her past menstrual period was on January 18, 2015.
4 months PTC, ultrasound was done and she was advised biopsy. Biopsy of the cervix
revealed adenocarcinoma. Patient was advised to undergo CT scan but was canceled due
to high creatinine level.
In the interim, there is persistence of the abdominal pain with associated vaginal bleeding.
5 days PTC, CT scan was done but no still awaiting for the results.
3 hours PTC, persistence and worsening left hypogastric pain (NRS 9/10 described as
“humihilab”) prompted consult. There is no associated vaginal bleeding or discharge.
Review of Systems
There was no blurring of vision, nausea, vomiting, bowel disturbances, or urinary changes.
Physical Exam
General: awake, coherent, tachycardic, tachypneic
Vital signs: BP 90/60 PR 110 RR 25 T 36.7 C Height 157 cm Weight 57 kg BMI 23.12
kg/m2
HEENT: anicteric sclerae, pale palpebral conjunctivae, no cervical lymphadenopathies,
anterior neck mass or tonsillopharyngeal congestion
Heart: adynamic precordium, distinct heart sounds, normal rate and regular rhythm, no
murmurs
Lungs: equal chest expansion, clear breath sounds, no adventitious sounds
Breast: No asymmetry, no palpable masses or tenderness, no lesions or discharge
Extremities: full and equal pulses, pink nail beds, capillary refill time < 2 seconds, cold
clammy extremities, no edema
Abdomen: Soft abdomen.Diffuse tenderness, right> left. There is noted tenderness on deep
palpation of the right hemiabdomen and tenderness on light palpation of left hypogastric
area. There is also noted rebound tenderness. Hypoactive bowel sounds.
Speculum exam: On speculum exam, there is a foul-smelling, nodular fungating mass
extending to the middle third of the anterior vaginal wall.
Internal exam: Normal external genitalia, cervix converted to a 7x 5 cm nodular fungating
mass extending to the middle third of the anterior vaginal wall. Corpus is small. The adnexae
could not be assessed due to guarding.
Rectovaginal exam: Good sphincter tone. Collapsed rectal vault. Noted palpable mass 3
cm from the anal verge at the anterior rectal wall. Bilateral parametria are fixed. No blood but
there is stool per examining finger.
Admitting Diagnosis:
Adenocarcinoma of the cervix, Stage IIIB
T/c Ovarian New Growth
Pertinent Labs on Admission
CBC
Results Reference
Serum Studies
Results Reference Range
Cl 98-107 mmol/L
Blood typing: A-
Urinalysis
Result Reference Range
Color yellow
Transparency turbid
Blood +1
pH 5.5 (acidic)
RBC 4 0-9
WBC 70 0-22
Tumor Markers
Results Reference Range
Doppler Studies
Color flow mapping of the cervical mass shows moderate central vascularity which on
Doppler interrogation reveals low resistance indices (PI=0.62, RI=0.55).
Impression:
Cervical mass, consistent with malignancy with extension to middle ⅓ of vagina, uterine
midcorpus and bilateral parametria
Anterior wall mass consider ovarian new growth, probably malignant by Sassone = 14 and
by Lerner = 7; IOTA: unilocular-solid; color score of 3; probably tumor extension
Thin endometrium with hematometra
Pseudocyst formation
* Please correlate clinically
Assessment
Adenocarcinoma of the cervix, Stage IIIB
Ovarian New Growth, probably malignant
Partial gut obstruction, resolved
Plan
1. Manage complication:
● Anemia - transfuse packed RBCs
2. The standard management for the cervical cancer in this patient is concurrent
chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
3. Diagnostics: We are still awaiting for the CT scan (abdominopelvic CT with triple contrast),
holoabdominal ultrasound, and plain abdominal x-ray results to guide radiotherapy and
further management.
4. Medications: Ceftriaxone, Metronidazole, Omeprazole, Paracetamol and Tramadol (for
abdominal pain).
5. Referrals
- General Surgery II - for possible exploration and staging
- Pain service
- Hospice
6. Diet as tolerated. Full body bath daily with perineal hygiene.