Cervical Cancer

The cervix is the lower, narrow part of the uterus. Cancer of the cervix can occur at any age. It occurs most often in women who are over 30 years old. It is rare in women under the age of 20, but is also common in women in their 20s.
Signs & Symptoms
Screening tests, such as Pap tests and HPV (human papillomavirus) tests, are important because signs and symptoms are not often present in the early stages of the disease.
Late Stage Symptoms
- Vaginal bleeding or spotting blood between menstrual periods or after menopause.
- Vaginal bleeding after sex, douching, or a pelvic exam.
- Vaginal bleeding that is not normal for you.
- Increased vaginal discharge.
- Pain in the pelvic area.
- Pain during sex.
- Blood in the urine.
- Signs of anemia (fatigue and dizziness).
- Poor appetite and weight loss.
Causes & Risk Factors
The main risk factor is being infected with human papillomavirus (HPV). This is passed from one person to another during sex. There are many types of HPV. Certain high risk types cause most cervical cancers. Other types increase the risk for genital warts or other conditions that are not cancer. Not all women who are infected with HPV get cervical cancer and HPV is not present in all women who have cervical cancer either.
The risk increases for persons who:
- Started having sex at an early age.
- Had or have sex with multiple sex partners. The more partners, the greater the risk.
- Had unprotected sex.
- Had or have sex with a partner who: has HPV, began having sex at a young age, and/or has or had many sexual partners.
- Not having routine Pap tests. These screen for abnormal cells that can turn into cancer. It can take several years for this to occur, but could happen in a short period of time, too. These changing cells can be treated so they don’t turn into cancer.
- Having a current or past sexually transmitted infection (STI), such as chlamydia. Having one kind of STI increases the risk of having another kind.
- Smoking.
- Long-term use of oral contraceptives.
- Being the daughter of a mother who took a drug known as DES during her pregnancy. (This drug was used from 1940 to 1970 to prevent miscarriages.)
- Taking drugs or having HIV/AIDS or any other condition that lowers the immune system.