“I Unknowingly Had Cancer For Ten Years, Only Being Diagnosed After I Gave Birth To It. AMA”
There's never a good time to find out you have cancer. But to find out you’ve had it for a decade? That's the shocking reality Reddit user SentientDumpsterBaby had to accept when she learned her uterine cancer had gone undetected.
The uterus is part of the female reproductive system and the place where a fetus develops during pregnancy. In this case, however, what emerged was not a baby but a tumor — one she jokingly “delivered” and even christened with a name: Sarcomaleigh.
After the whole ordeal ended, the Redditor launched an "Ask Me Anything" and answered people's biggest questions about her experience.
This post may include affiliate links.
Cancers are frequently missed prior to routine procedures. An analysis of data from 26,444 cases in the 2014-2015 American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, provided staggering results:
One in 20 women over age 55 were subjected to surgery for benign indications, but were later found to have malignancies in the main body of the uterus. Nearly one in 10 women over age 55 who underwent total abdominal hysterectomies had hidden corpus uteri cancer.
Overall, prevalence of cancers undetected at the initiation of hysterectomies was almost as high as one in 70. For women who underwent total laparoscopic or laparoscopic-assisted vaginal hysterectomies, the estimated prevalence increased to nearly one in 50.
The major reason I switched to female doctors. Some of them have attitude, but they all go through the same stuff I do, so they know about what's pretty normal and what's not.
If your d.a. doctor was a male, change doctors. If your d.a. was female get her license noted with the hospital board and the medical board.
Why should a female doctor be treated more harshly than a male doctor? If we (women) want all doctors to be competent regardless of gender, we should also hold them equally accountable.
Load More Replies..."We were surprised that the prevalence of occult cancer was higher than some prior estimates," senior author of the study Cary Gross, who is a professor of medicine and epidemiology as well as the director of the National Clinician Scholars Program at Yale, told The Cancer Letter.
"At the end of the day, we may end up with a helpful clinical guide that suggests which women would benefit from further evaluation to rule out occult malignancy before making decisions about how to operate."
The fact that horrible discharge is considered "par for the course" is terrifying as a medical norm for female problems, and people need to stop this reproductive "control" garbage that dismisses women as liars. My FIRST vaginal exam they refused to believe I was a virgin. Hurt so incredibly bad, and they didn't even care, but I was diagnosed with PCOS and everyday for 40 years until I had an ablasion, I suffered the effects of it until a doctor finally ALLOWED me to have one.
Welcome to the United States, where most people don't have health care and women have less.
The same group of Yale researchers later completed a second, much larger study that analyzed data from more than 200,000 women who underwent a hysterectomy between 2003 and 2013.
Drawing from the New York Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System database, the researchers got similar results: the overall prevalence of occult uterine cancer was one in 100. Up to 1.96 percent of women who underwent total abdominal hysterectomy had undetected uterine cancers. The prevalence rate jumped to 8.64 percent for women with postmenopausal bleeding.
This person obviously doesn't live in the US or they would know how frigging expensive ambulance rides can be.
No, you should definitely sue. We had one patient who sued and was awarded free healthcare for life at our hospital.
I would absolutely sue. With the money you’d be awarded, you could afford to move somewhere that has a better healthcare system than the one you’re currently relying on, if that’s what you want to do.
Good lord. Every American reading this should be phoning their congressman right now to advocate for free healthcare. Jesus!
Exactly. If she would have been able to not worry about the bills she could have gotten seen in Vermont and possibly avoided the rest of it. It sounds so traumatic.
Load More Replies...All women undergoing hysterectomies or myomectomies need to receive thorough preoperative workup, especially older women at high risk, according to Robert Mannel, director of the Stephenson Cancer Center at the University of Oklahoma, a group chair of NRG Oncology, and the chair of the Protocol Development Committee for Gynecologic Cancers in the NCI National Clinical Trials Network.
"I think the takeaway that I got from reading ... [this study] was very similar to what the author stated and that is, in a postmenopausal woman, you better really make sure that you are very thorough in your evaluation and particularly, if somebody has abnormal uterine bleeding, you really want to make sure," Mannel explained to The Cancer Letter. "You might need more than just an endometrial biopsy or an ultrasound. That individual may need diagnostic hysteroscopy, something that can be even more sensitive at picking up occult malignancies."
Uterine cancer is a general term that describes cancer in the uterus:
- Endometrial cancer develops in the endometrium, the inner lining of the uterus. It's one of the most common gynecologic cancers — cancers affecting the reproductive system;
- Uterine sarcoma develops in the myometrium, the muscle wall of the uterus. Uterine sarcomas are quite rare.
The American Cancer Society estimates that this year in the United States:
- About 69,120 new cases of cancer of the uterus will be diagnosed.
- About 13,860 women will die from cancers of the uterus.
These estimates include both endometrial cancers and uterine sarcomas.
The doctor may have thought it was a prolapsed uterus or r****m. These are usually just pushed back in until the pt can get to surgery.
I am wondering if OP is a woman of color, since her medical care was abysmal, and it is well known that people of color do not receive very good medical care, especially in the south.
I hadn't thought of that, but you could be onto something.
Load More Replies...How to tell someone lives in the US? When you almost die because male Southern Drs would rather fob you off & blame you plus you are too poor for a fùcking ambulance. How, just HOW are the people of this country not rioting in the streets?!? I live in Australia & my 30yo niece has recently been diagnosed with an aggressive breast cancer. Within 4 weeks of feeling a lump, she was having chemo. It was a bit of a struggle to get the diagnosis because of her age, but she perservered. She'll have about a year of treatments. How much is it costing? Not a cent, because we have a decent healthcare system & a government that isn't trying to take over anyone's bodily autonomy.
I had an exworkmate who got fobbed off years. Got told oh its just menopause etc, as her stomach got bigger and bigger. Eventually after about 5 years someone decided she needed a scan. Poof 10 pound benign tumor was removed.
When we have some flavor of revolution after this descent into authoritarianism (I don't think it will necessarily be a violent revolution, or a quick, definitive one with a clear beginning and end, but I do believe people are going to stop putting up with this b******t, one way or another), we are going to have a public healthcare system. It's likely going to at least start as "medicare for all", but there may eventually be free, government-run hospitals and clinics, too. It's going to be a top demand, top 3 at least, on the list of demands that the people will make when we remake the government. Taxes need to go toward healthcare; not ICE, not golden ballrooms, not bombs, not politicians' pockets. People can't live like this anymore.
Ok, this is fascinating and I want to read more answers when though I don’t exactly have specific questions
Having lived in the south much of my life , I know that the lack of sufficient available healthcare to significant portions of the population and the incredible lack of education and total and complete ignorance of so much of said population. I do not doubt the experiences this poor woman dealt with for so long. I’ve seen it with my own eyes in areas that weren’t so remote. It’s a tribute to the state of the health care system in this country and how women are treated in general. It’s criminal!
How to tell someone lives in the US? When you almost die because male Southern Drs would rather fob you off & blame you plus you are too poor for a fùcking ambulance. How, just HOW are the people of this country not rioting in the streets?!? I live in Australia & my 30yo niece has recently been diagnosed with an aggressive breast cancer. Within 4 weeks of feeling a lump, she was having chemo. It was a bit of a struggle to get the diagnosis because of her age, but she perservered. She'll have about a year of treatments. How much is it costing? Not a cent, because we have a decent healthcare system & a government that isn't trying to take over anyone's bodily autonomy.
I had an exworkmate who got fobbed off years. Got told oh its just menopause etc, as her stomach got bigger and bigger. Eventually after about 5 years someone decided she needed a scan. Poof 10 pound benign tumor was removed.
When we have some flavor of revolution after this descent into authoritarianism (I don't think it will necessarily be a violent revolution, or a quick, definitive one with a clear beginning and end, but I do believe people are going to stop putting up with this b******t, one way or another), we are going to have a public healthcare system. It's likely going to at least start as "medicare for all", but there may eventually be free, government-run hospitals and clinics, too. It's going to be a top demand, top 3 at least, on the list of demands that the people will make when we remake the government. Taxes need to go toward healthcare; not ICE, not golden ballrooms, not bombs, not politicians' pockets. People can't live like this anymore.
Ok, this is fascinating and I want to read more answers when though I don’t exactly have specific questions
Having lived in the south much of my life , I know that the lack of sufficient available healthcare to significant portions of the population and the incredible lack of education and total and complete ignorance of so much of said population. I do not doubt the experiences this poor woman dealt with for so long. I’ve seen it with my own eyes in areas that weren’t so remote. It’s a tribute to the state of the health care system in this country and how women are treated in general. It’s criminal!

