← Return to Uterine biopsy not enough tissue extracted: Now What?

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@tclare15

I'm writing to let you know what happened with my Stanford visit on Feb. 7th as you requested. I was pretty impressed with how attentive the doctor was with my concerns and she was very thorough with answers and plan of action. Since the biopsy done by the previous gynocologist was unsucessful and there was not sufficient endometrial tissue for the pathologist to work with from that procedure, the next step needs to be a hysteroscopy which will allow the doctor to see clearly the inside of the uterus. She will get a good sampling of tissue as well as locate and take out the lesion (if it is still there) for pathology. She was very clear that she understood the possibility of puncture was a huge concern to me given the natural post-menopausal condition of my reproductive organs, and addressed that saying she is and will be very mindful of that when the procedure takes place. Today I had a telehealth visit with her just to clarify points and plan for hysteroscopy. The problem is that the soonest she can get me in for the procedure will be in April. She assured me that given the images from the ultrasound and reading the reports, she felt confident the wait would not be problematic. She will perform a hysteroscopy in the Operating room at the hospital under MAC (Monitored Anesthesia Care). If the results are shown to be pre-cancer or cancer, then she will refer me to Stanford's oncology gynecologist department for further action (which I have already determined will be a hysterectomy) . Right now, I just need to wait for the scheduler to call me and schedule the surgery. I find that researching on-line is both scary and re-assuring depending on what reports and clinical trials I read and I clearly need to step back from that at some point and trust my decisions thus far. There is so much to absorb, and without a medical background, it is hard sometimes to put what I read into helpful and relevant perspective. Thank you so much for your concern and comments. Really appreciate that!

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Replies to "I'm writing to let you know what happened with my Stanford visit on Feb. 7th as..."

It sounds like you got a lot accomplished and you seem to be satisfied so far. The doctor sounds attentive and appropriate with addressing your concerns. I have no experience with this type of thing, but I hope those who are will chime in.

I have done scary things to myself reading all kinds of things on-line. I try to avoid, but I know it’s difficult. Hopefully, things will continue to go smoothly. Sending positive thoughts and well wishes.

Hello as much as you can please try not to google fir info. Write your questions down and most physicians now have a patient portal so you can ask questions in between visits I made the mistake of searching early on and only resulted in needless worry about things I’d read that didn’t pertain to my diagnosis. Since then I have two sites I use and then come to every appointment with my questions written down. Take care

@tclare15 Thank you for sharing all of these details of your appointment. I'm relieved to know that your doctor spent so much time with you and explained, in detail, what and how the hysteroscopy procedure will go. Like you, I would be nervous waiting until April but it sounds like your doctor was reassuring about the wait. Perhaps there will be a cancellation and you'll get in before April?

I'm going to respond to your concern in a following post about residents present at Stanford during your procedure. I have received and continue to receive my specialty care at Mayo in Rochester. Mayo Clinic is an academic medical center and there are frequently residents and fellows in my appointments. I was referred to Mayo for endometrial cancer and so that's where I had my hysterectomy, my radiation treatments, as well as all of my cancer surveillance appointments. There was a physician present (fellowship in gyn-oncology, not a resident) during hysterectomy procedure and this was clearly detailed in my surgery notes. In fact, I met the gyn-oncology fellow in pre-op. I personally have great confidence in teaching hospitals because the residents and fellows are under the supervision of these skilled physicians who are on the faculty at teaching institutions. I was a professor in a university with an academic medical center and while my academic appointment was not in medicine I did interact frequently with physicians in research. I worked with physicians at "the top of their game" and this is what I have observed in my own care at Mayo Clinic as well as the care my partner receives at Mayo. They conduct research and they know the literature in their respective fields. I hope this will give you more confidence in your upcoming hysteroscopy procedure.

This is an update to my experience at Stanford regarding post menopausal workup for 15 mm thick endometrial thickness, Post menopausal bleeding, and a small lesion found on Transvaginal Ultrasound. I need to say this far my experience has been frustrating. Initial consult with gynecologist was fine and plan for operating room hysteroscopy decided upon. Dr. forgot to send in request for the OR, so this set me back a week and the operation could not be scheduled until May, so I opted for an "in office" hysteroscopy with another doctor which was a week ago (April 15). Message from Attending Physician sent to me a couple of days after procedure says "Good News: no cancer or pre-cancer..no need for additional treatment or workup....Let me know if you would like to dicuss the results further". I then look at the attatched Pathology report which says under Diagnosis comments: "The sections demonstrate extremely scant strips of surface inactive endometrium. There is not sufficient intact endometrium showing endometrial glands with stroma to evaluate for hyperplasia or carcinoma. Additional sampling is suggested if clinical concern persists".......So Again...I am left with questions and insufficient tissue to make a diagnosis, BUT the gynecologist is saying I'm in the clear ... Has anyone on this forum encountered such a conflicting situation? Am I reading this correctly? The Resident's notes after the procedure indicated no lesion was found, but the pathology report claims the operation was "hysteroscopic polypectomy"..... I am so confused! Any light to be shed on this? I have left a message asking for an appointment to discuss this with the doctor, but I am frankly unsure now about getting a straight answer.