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Cervical cancer

Cervical cancer, cared for close to home by one team.

Cervical cancer is often treated with a combination of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, depending on the stage. Our medical oncologists coordinate the systemic and combined treatment within that plan.

How we approach it

Stage-guided treatment

Early cervical cancers may be treated with surgery; more advanced disease often combines radiation and chemotherapy

Immunotherapy options

Modern treatment increasingly includes immunotherapy for advanced or recurrent disease

Coordinated care

We work alongside gynecologic and radiation specialists so the plan moves as one

What the workup looks like

1
From an abnormal test to a diagnosis

An abnormal Pap or HPV result leads to colposcopy and a biopsy to confirm exactly what's there.

2
Staging the extent

A pelvic exam, MRI, and sometimes a PET/CT show whether the cancer is confined to the cervix or has spread.

3
Surgery or chemoradiation

Early disease is often treated surgically; more advanced disease usually calls for chemotherapy and radiation together.

Common questions

How is cervical cancer usually found?
Often through routine Pap or HPV screening, sometimes before symptoms appear — one reason screening matters so much.
Is chemotherapy always needed?
Not for every case. Early cancers may be treated with surgery alone; chemotherapy is often combined with radiation for more advanced disease.
Does HPV cause cervical cancer?
Nearly all cervical cancers are linked to HPV — which is why HPV vaccination and screening are so effective at prevention.
Can immunotherapy help?
Yes — for advanced or recurrent cervical cancer, immunotherapy has become an important option.

This page is general information, not medical advice for your specific situation. Every diagnosis — and every patient — is different. Bring your questions to your care team.