What are the diagnostic criteria for cervical adenocarcinoma

Cervical adenocarcinoma is a malignant tumor originated from cervical glands, and the diagnostic criteria include clinical manifestations, cytological examination, colposcopy and pathological examination.
1. Clinical manifestations: Typical symptom is contact bleeding, which may have no special manifestations in the early stage, but with the progression of the disease, abnormal vaginal bleeding, leukorrhea and other symptoms may appear, and lead to anemia, infection and other complications.
2. Cytology: The cells obtained from the cervix suggest abnormal glandular cells, such as atypical glandular epithelial cells, and human papillomavirus type 16 and 18 positivity through cervical cytology and human papillomavirus examination.
3. Colposcopy: Colposcopic observation of cervical lesions reveals highly differentiated glands, normal ciliated structures surrounded by scattered or dense and raised columnar villi and honeycomb images.
4. Pathological examination: take tissues from the abnormal part of colposcopy and carry out pathological examination, which can be divided into heterogeneous hyperplasia of cervical glands and adenocarcinoma in situ.
It is recommended that women should have regular medical checkups for cervical cancer screening and go to regular hospitals in time when the physical examination is abnormal, and standardize the treatment under the doctor’s guidance, so as to avoid delaying the condition and leading to adverse reactions.