The endometrium may become cancerous.
Due to the long-term effect of internal and external disease-causing factors, the endometrium may have mutations at the gene level and abnormal function regulation, which may lead to excessive cell proliferation and transformation into new organisms that may become cancerous.
The endometrium may become cancerous, including various pathological types, such as epithelial tumors, endometrial carcinoma, including adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, metaplastic cell carcinoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, and small cell carcinoma.
The endometrium may also develop mesenchymal tumors including endometrial mesenchymal and related tumors such as endometrial sarcoma and endometrial mesenchymal sarcoma.
The endometrium may also have mixed epithelial and mesenchymal tumors such as carcinosarcoma, adenosarcoma, adenofibroma, adenomyosis (atypical polypoid subtype), and possibly trophoblastic tumors and secondary tumors.
The presence of carcinoma in the endometrium suggests prompt hospitalization for definitive diagnosis and treatment to avoid delays.