Treatment of precancerous lesions of gynecological tumors

Precancerous lesions of gynecological tumors can be treated either surgically with a curative result, which is the most common procedure, or conservatively.

Surgical treatment
Surgical treatment may be destructive or ablative. During the destructive process, precancerous tissue is destroyed, so it can no longer be examined histologically. Therefore, it is necessary to take a biopsy sample prior to the procedure. Destructive methods are rarely used anymore. In the case of ablation, surgical removal of the tissue is performed, which can then be examined histologically.
 * Vulva
 * Excision of the lesion or skinning is performed.


 * Vagina
 * Among the destructive procedures is laser vaporization, which is no longer widely used. Of the ablative procedures, laser ablation is used, with a more radical approach: partial or even total colpectomy.


 * Cervix
 * Coblation or cylindrical dissection is performed (ablative method). The LEEP (loop electrosurgery excision procedure) method is common, in which the cone of the cervix is ​​cut out with an electrocoagulation loop. Another option is the cold knife method. Laser ablation is rarely performed.


 * Endometrium
 * Hysterectomy with bilateral adnexectomy is performed. Fertility-preserving treatment is non-surgical (see below).

Non-surgical treatment
Immunomodulatory treatment against HPV with Imiquimod can be used for precancerous lesions of the vulva and vagina. In endometrial precancerous disease, progestogen therapy can be used to preserve the uterus and achieve the regression of the lesion.

Related articles

 * Precancerous lesions in gynecology
 * Cervical precancerous lesions