56 research outputs found
Fanconi anemia and vaginal squamous cell carcinoma
Fanconi Anemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by chromosome instability, cellular hypersensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents, and increased predisposition to malignancies. We describe here a 28 year-old female with FA and vaginal squamous cell carcinoma treated by radiation therapy alone. The patient developed arm phlebitis, pulmonary fungal infection, and severe rectal bleeding, followed by hypocalcaemia, hypokalemia, vaginal bacterial and fungal infection, with subsequent leg and arm phlebitis, perineal abscess, and sepsis. The patient died 12 weeks later
Total laparoscopic radical hysterectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy in locally advanced stage IB2-IIB cervical cancer patients after neoadjuvant chemotherapy
Third-Trimester Intraplacental Choriocarcinoma Presenting With Respiratory Failure and Hyperthyroidism
Diagnostic and prognostic morphometric features in WHO2003 invasive endometrial stromal tumours
Utility of peritoneal lavage cytology during laparoscopic salpingo-oophorectomy: a retrospective analysis
Risk of epithelial ovarian cancer in asymptomatic women with ultrasound-detected ovarian masses: a prospective cohort study within the UK collaborative trial of ovarian cancer screening (UKCTOCS)
Transvaginal ultrasound assessment of myometrial and cervical stromal invasion in women with endometrial cancer: interobserver reproducibility among ultrasound experts and gynecologists
Cutaneous metastasis from vulvar squamous cell carcinoma: a rare occurrence that should not be forgotten
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