Your doctor may find vulvar cancer during a routine visit, even if you don’t have symptoms. If you’re having symptoms of vulvar cancer, your doctor will ask you about these things:
Your doctor may find vulvar cancer during a routine visit, even if you don’t have symptoms. If you’re having symptoms of vulvar cancer, your doctor will ask you about these things.
The doctor may also perform certain tests to check if you have vulvar cancer. You may need more than one of these tests. Here are some of the tests doctors use to diagnose or rule out vulvar cancer.
A pelvic exam is recommended as a regular screening for women. You can have this exam in your doctor’s office. For this exam, you remove your clothes from the waist down and put on a medical gown. You lie on your back on an exam table and bend your knees. You place your feet in supports called stirrups at the end of the table. This position allows the doctor to look at or feel your vulva, vagina, cervix, uterus, ovaries, fallopian tubes, rectum, and bladder. The doctor uses a tool called a speculum to hold open and widen your vagina. This may pinch a bit. The speculum allows the doctor to see the upper portion of your vagina and cervix, which is the area that connects the vagina to the uterus. During a pelvic exam, your doctor will look at and feel your vulva, inspecting it for changes. If the doctor sees something suspicious, he or she may recommend a biopsy. A biopsy can help tell the difference between a precancerous condition and an invasive cancer.
The Pap test is a way to check cells from the cervix and the vagina. It can be done at the same time as a pelvic exam. Using the speculum to widen the vagina, your doctor swabs your cervix to collect cells. A special doctor called a pathologist examines these cells under a microscope. This test is not a test for vulvar cancer, but it can rule out other gynecologic problems, such as certain infections or cervical cancer.
This test checks for the presence of HPV, which is short for human papillomavirus. This virus usually goes away on its own. In rare cases, HPV can cause vulvar cells to change and become precancerous. Your doctor may choose to do this test at the same time as a Pap test.
For this test, your doctor uses a tool called a colposcope to magnify your cervix, vagina, and vulva. This lets your doctor choose suspicious looking spots of tissue to remove and examine, which is called a biopsy. The doctor sends the removed cells to a lab to be checked for cancer.
During a colposcopy of the vulva, the doctor treats your skin with a diluted solution of acetic acid, the main ingredient in vinegar. It causes suspicious areas to turn white. If the doctor sees abnormal places, he or she may inject local anesthetic into your skin to make it numb. The doctor uses the hand-held colposcope to determine where to remove the tissue. If the abnormal area is small, your doctor may completely remove it with the biopsy.
A colposcopy or
a biopsy may show that you don’t have cancer but that you do have precancerous
lesions in your vulva.
Vulvar cancer
forms slowly. It usually begins with precancerous changes that may last for
many years. You may have vulvar rashes, moles, lumps, or other changes
that don’t go away. The term most often used for this condition is vulvar
intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN). Intraepithelial means that the
precancerous cells are confined to the surface layer of the vulvar skin, called
the epithelium. Other terms for this precancerous condition are severe
dysplasia and carcinoma in situ. The type of treatment your doctor
will suggest depends on the type of disease and how far it has progressed. Your
doctor may suggest one of these types of treatment.
Because VIN may
come back after treatment, be sure to keep all follow-up appointments with your
doctor. Go back to your doctor if you have itching or burning on your vulva.