Radiation or not after surgery for endometrial cancer?

Posted by marceyw @marceyw, Feb 4, 2024

I was diagnosed with early stage endometrial cancer at Christmas. Had complete hysterectomy on 1/9/24. There was no cancer in the sentinel lymph nodes, ovaries or tubes. My doctor is suggesting brachytherapy to cut my 10% chance of recurrence to 5%. I’m concerned about the side effects. Has anyone been thru this and what are the possible side affects of this type of radiation? Dr said I don’t have the harmful P53 gene but do have a gene that would qualify me for immunotherapy if it were to come back. Really torn about what to do next. Would like to think I could fight the return with diet and lifestyle. Ideas and experiences appreciated.

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Profile picture for karina60 @karina60

Happy to have found this forum. In Nov
2020 my diagnosis was stage 1 endometrial cancer; complete hysterectomy, lymph nodes clear. Five sessions of brachy. Told I have excellent prognosis. Forward 4 years to Dec 2024. Pain in lower right pelvic area. PCP ordered X-ray & was told I was constipated. I disagreed and pushed for days for a CT scan given my history. CT scan showed a large tumor. Recurrence of endometrial cancer. This time it traveled to my
Upper left lung 4 nodules. Metastatic stage 4. I’m half way through chemo have 3 more rounds. Fighting for my life. Advocate for yourself. If I did not push for the CT scan, I would be looking at end of life by December. At least now, I have a chance!

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I was diagnosed with endometrioid adenocarcinoma of the uterus, stage 1. I was told this is a slow moving cancer. The cancer would have been missed if a second biopsy/ or larger piece of uterus lining wasn't tested. The first biopsy during a hysteroscopy / D &C procedure showed no signs of cancer. It just showed up a polyp on the lining of my uterus. The polyp was removed and no cancer was found. I think a lot of my bleeding was because of the polyp. My question is, is this the kind of cancer you were diagnosed with..
Good luck to you!

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Profile picture for mydeb00071 @mydeb00071

I was diagnosed with endometrioid adenocarcinoma of the uterus, stage 1. I was told this is a slow moving cancer. The cancer would have been missed if a second biopsy/ or larger piece of uterus lining wasn't tested. The first biopsy during a hysteroscopy / D &C procedure showed no signs of cancer. It just showed up a polyp on the lining of my uterus. The polyp was removed and no cancer was found. I think a lot of my bleeding was because of the polyp. My question is, is this the kind of cancer you were diagnosed with..
Good luck to you!

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Yes. That’s the cancer I was diagnosed with. Wishing you all the best in health.

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Profile picture for karina60 @karina60

@naturegirl5 thank you for connecting with me! I copied my chemo/immunotherapy below. My cycle is every 21 days I’ve just completed 3 of 6 infusions. Next is Sept 8. I have my 1st CT scan on Sept 5 to check progress. I’m doing very well so far. My main side effect is pain that is present in the days after my infusion. The pain starts to go away about 6-8 days after infusion. I’ve had no tummy /bathroom issues. Grateful for that but the chemo pain is no joke. Neuropathy is also present. I’m staying positive but this weekend was tough. I didn’t hear from anyone all weekend. I felt so alone with my cancer but, people have lives to lead and I understand that. It was just strange for it to be quiet after many months of people constantly checking on me. I bet a lot of these feelings are familiar to the survivors on this forum : )

Regimen: BILH OP Dostarlimab-gxly / PACLitaxel / CARBOplatin

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@karina60 This is all so very encouraging. Thank you for sharing your chemo/immunotherapy.

Spending the weekend by yourself and in pain is likely familiar to many of the cancer survivors here. I'm with you. I like people to check in with me. I wonder if your friends and family realized how much you would like that contact? Sure, people have their own busy lives to lead but a little reminder at times can prompt those phone calls or visits. It can be difficult to ask.

It's so good that you are doing well with your treatment protocol even with the chemotherapy pain and neuropathy. One of my friends had chemo/immunotherapy last year for colorectal cancer. She had a lot of neuropathy in her lower legs and feet. During a routine visit to her orthopedic surgeon for a hip replacement she'd had a few years ago they talked about the neuropathy. Her doctor suggested physical therapy (PT) which she had not considered and none of her cancer care team had suggested. She did the PT and found it to be encouraging to get her moving and helpful. Anyway, just a thought.

September 5 and 8 are coming up soon. Will you come back and let me know what you find out with your CT scan?

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I was diagnosed 12/21 and had a complete hysterectomy 1/22. Lymph nodes were clear and was told 'they got it all'. It was stage 1a and I was told 'standard care' no chemo or radiation needed because the infiltration into the myometrium was only 36% and anything under 50% did not need adjuvant treatment. (I later learned that this had just changed from 33% shortly before my diagnosis, so if I had been diagnosed a bit earlier, the recommendation would have been to have adjuvant treatment.) Heck, 95% of women go on with no recurrence and I should consider myself luck to be in such a great state. Just come back every 3 months for an internal exam (turned out to be very brief exams). I happily bought the cool-aid even though in the back of my mind I thought there should have been some sort of follow up. At least a scan or something. But I followed Drs orders and didn't question anything. In May 2023 (1-1/2 hrs. later) I had my 3-month check up. She felt and saw nothing, so I was given my clear bill of health. June 2023 I started bleeding. I set up an appointment immediately, and was greeted with "it's probably because of rough sex, I just saw you a couple weeks ago". But when she examined me her face changed and told me a different story. She said 'good thing my exam irritated the vaginal cuff and the tumor broke through'. Good thing? I had a tumor growing behind the cuff that she couldn't feel, but might have been caught with a scan. By the time it had done enough damage to bleed through the cuff, it has also advanced into my lymph nodes. I very much wish I had advocated for 6 month scans at the minimum, if not for follow up radiation.

My advice is listen to what your doctors say, get 2nd opinions, and above all listen to what your body is telling you. Learn to advocate. Learn to speak up.

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I’m sorry that you felt so alone this past weekend, on top of managing your treatment. I was fortunate to have a few friends who started to communicate with me daily via text or email. Just a quick good morning, good night, or thinking of you. It gave me the opportunity to start a conversation if I was in the mood or to just reply with an emoji. There needs to be a workshop for friends of cancer patients on how to communicate!
Sending hugs.

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Profile picture for karina60 @karina60

Yes. That’s the cancer I was diagnosed with. Wishing you all the best in health.

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Thank you!

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Profile picture for Helen, Volunteer Mentor @naturegirl5

@karina60 This is all so very encouraging. Thank you for sharing your chemo/immunotherapy.

Spending the weekend by yourself and in pain is likely familiar to many of the cancer survivors here. I'm with you. I like people to check in with me. I wonder if your friends and family realized how much you would like that contact? Sure, people have their own busy lives to lead but a little reminder at times can prompt those phone calls or visits. It can be difficult to ask.

It's so good that you are doing well with your treatment protocol even with the chemotherapy pain and neuropathy. One of my friends had chemo/immunotherapy last year for colorectal cancer. She had a lot of neuropathy in her lower legs and feet. During a routine visit to her orthopedic surgeon for a hip replacement she'd had a few years ago they talked about the neuropathy. Her doctor suggested physical therapy (PT) which she had not considered and none of her cancer care team had suggested. She did the PT and found it to be encouraging to get her moving and helpful. Anyway, just a thought.

September 5 and 8 are coming up soon. Will you come back and let me know what you find out with your CT scan?

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I will return with an update! Thanks for your encouragement. I will go outside my independent comfort zone and ask for help / contact when I really need it. If I speak up
I know they will be here for me!

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Profile picture for cialonel @cialonel

I was diagnosed 12/21 and had a complete hysterectomy 1/22. Lymph nodes were clear and was told 'they got it all'. It was stage 1a and I was told 'standard care' no chemo or radiation needed because the infiltration into the myometrium was only 36% and anything under 50% did not need adjuvant treatment. (I later learned that this had just changed from 33% shortly before my diagnosis, so if I had been diagnosed a bit earlier, the recommendation would have been to have adjuvant treatment.) Heck, 95% of women go on with no recurrence and I should consider myself luck to be in such a great state. Just come back every 3 months for an internal exam (turned out to be very brief exams). I happily bought the cool-aid even though in the back of my mind I thought there should have been some sort of follow up. At least a scan or something. But I followed Drs orders and didn't question anything. In May 2023 (1-1/2 hrs. later) I had my 3-month check up. She felt and saw nothing, so I was given my clear bill of health. June 2023 I started bleeding. I set up an appointment immediately, and was greeted with "it's probably because of rough sex, I just saw you a couple weeks ago". But when she examined me her face changed and told me a different story. She said 'good thing my exam irritated the vaginal cuff and the tumor broke through'. Good thing? I had a tumor growing behind the cuff that she couldn't feel, but might have been caught with a scan. By the time it had done enough damage to bleed through the cuff, it has also advanced into my lymph nodes. I very much wish I had advocated for 6 month scans at the minimum, if not for follow up radiation.

My advice is listen to what your doctors say, get 2nd opinions, and above all listen to what your body is telling you. Learn to advocate. Learn to speak up.

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I’m sorry you went through all of that in finding the recurrence! I also did NOT have any follow up scans ordered. What’s up with that?! Just brief exams and check ins. My infiltration was 76%. In hindsight I’m shaking my head at the aftercare. But, we are both still here and have our voices. Thanks for sharing your story!!

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Profile picture for aardvark2118 @aardvark2118

Hi. Had hysterectomy December 2022. Chemo and all radiation completed in august 2023

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I was just diagnosed in March 2025, this year. After radical hysterectomy, had very large 14. 0 Tumor/cysts that hoped were fibroids but it came back endometrial cancer, Stage 3, High (pole mutated) I chose to have radiation only. Dr gave 28 external treatments, to internal (High) brach treatments.

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Profile picture for cialonel @cialonel

I was diagnosed 12/21 and had a complete hysterectomy 1/22. Lymph nodes were clear and was told 'they got it all'. It was stage 1a and I was told 'standard care' no chemo or radiation needed because the infiltration into the myometrium was only 36% and anything under 50% did not need adjuvant treatment. (I later learned that this had just changed from 33% shortly before my diagnosis, so if I had been diagnosed a bit earlier, the recommendation would have been to have adjuvant treatment.) Heck, 95% of women go on with no recurrence and I should consider myself luck to be in such a great state. Just come back every 3 months for an internal exam (turned out to be very brief exams). I happily bought the cool-aid even though in the back of my mind I thought there should have been some sort of follow up. At least a scan or something. But I followed Drs orders and didn't question anything. In May 2023 (1-1/2 hrs. later) I had my 3-month check up. She felt and saw nothing, so I was given my clear bill of health. June 2023 I started bleeding. I set up an appointment immediately, and was greeted with "it's probably because of rough sex, I just saw you a couple weeks ago". But when she examined me her face changed and told me a different story. She said 'good thing my exam irritated the vaginal cuff and the tumor broke through'. Good thing? I had a tumor growing behind the cuff that she couldn't feel, but might have been caught with a scan. By the time it had done enough damage to bleed through the cuff, it has also advanced into my lymph nodes. I very much wish I had advocated for 6 month scans at the minimum, if not for follow up radiation.

My advice is listen to what your doctors say, get 2nd opinions, and above all listen to what your body is telling you. Learn to advocate. Learn to speak up.

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Exactly. On a post previous I spoke of a endo stage one, treated no further then hysterectomy. Well, long story short, she was treated kinda similar, and was eventually given a scan, but still they said showed nothing, but she was having some sort of symptoms. I can remember. Nevertheless, down the road, like in 9 mos or something she still issues, and had a MRI, type scan which revealed went to I think breast/ other, then to her brain. People were inquiring to her, responses stopped which was heartbreaking and Again I say after reading that, I would always continue other care somehow in someway, and never let up. Better safe then sorry, be proactive. I'm stage 3 endo, high grade, pole mutated.. They say they do better, etc, which I pray true, but I have 1000% proactive stance myself. Prevention however info is can find and do. Prayers for you 🙏🏻

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