Definition

Endometrial cancer is a malignancy originating from the lining of the uterus (endometrium).

  • Most common gynecologic cancer in developed countries.
  • Classified into two main types:
    1. Type I (Endometrioid): Estrogen-dependent, usually low-grade, better prognosis.
    2. Type II (Non-endometrioid: serous, clear cell, carcinosarcoma): Estrogen-independent, high-grade, poor prognosis.

Epidemiology

  • Median age at diagnosis: ~60 years.
  • Risk factors differ by type.

Risk Factors

Type I (Endometrioid, estrogen-driven)

Type II (Serous, clear cell)

  • Older age
  • Genetic mutations (p53, HER2 amplification)
  • Less associated with estrogen exposure

Other Genetic Factors

Pathogenesis / Molecular Features

Type Molecular Alterations Clinical Relevance
Type I (Endometrioid) PTEN loss, PIK3CA, KRAS, MSI-H Often MSI-H → responsive to immunotherapy
Type II (Serous) TP53 mutations, HER2 amplification Aggressive, often requires chemotherapy

Clinical Features

  • Abnormal uterine bleeding (most common, postmenopausal spotting)
  • Pelvic pain, bloating, or mass effect in advanced disease
  • Often early-stage diagnosis due to bleeding

Diagnostics

  • Transvaginal ultrasound (endometrial thickness assessment)
  • Endometrial biopsy (histopathology)
  • Imaging: MRI, CT for staging
  • Molecular testing: MMR, MSI, HER2, POLE mutation

Treatment (Oncology Pharmacy Focus)

Surgery

Adjuvant Therapy

Targeted / Immunotherapy

Supportive Care

  • Anti-emetics, growth factors if chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression
  • VTE prophylaxis in high-risk patients

Prognosis

 

  • Type I: Usually early-stage, good prognosis (5-year survival >80%)
  • Type II: Aggressive, often advanced at diagnosis, poorer prognosis