The word "tumor", in the context we use it when talking about the uterus, rarely means "cancerous". One out of a thousand women has a cancerous fibroid.
What if a woman has a fairly good-sized fibroid? What are the treatment options?
KEITH ISAACSON, MD: There are a few options. She can have a hysterectomy, which is surgical removal of the entire uterus, and that is, of course, the extreme option. It will remove the fibroid and the fibroid will never come back.
But she can also have a therapeutic hysteroscopy, in which a larger hysteroscope is placed through the cervix and the fibroid is actually shaved out using electrical current.
She could also have a uterine artery embolization, in which the blood vessels that supply the uterus are actually occluded with very tiny particles. When you cut off the blood supply to the uterus, it turns out the muscle of the uterus does not die, but often the fibroids will. This is a better option for patients who have very large fibroids or who have symptoms of pressure on their bladder or on their bowel. But it also can work for patients with abnormal uterine bleeding.
GRACE JANIK, MD: Myomectomy is also a choice. In that procedure, you remove the fibroids that are in the wall of the uterus and reconstruct the uterus. And you preserve fertility.
So there are a number of treatment options for abnormal bleeding.
STEVE COHEN, MD: Yes, and you've got to be suspicious of a doctor who offers you only one option. Something is not quite right.