Loading...

Vaginal Cancer is Rare — But We Treat It Well

This cancer grows in the vagina. It’s uncommon, but early checks with Pap and colposcopy catch it fast. Dr. Bruce Semo at Irys offers gentle care in Nairobi. You’re Not Alone.

Vaginal cancer screening and care at Irys Medical Center

What is Vaginal Cancer?

It starts in the vagina — the tube from the cervix to the outside of the body.

Most cases are in women over 60. It’s very rare — less than 1 in 100,000 women.

The Main Cause: HPV

HPV (Human Papillomavirus) causes most vaginal cancers.

High-risk HPV can stay in the body and turn normal cells into cancer over years.

Other risks: smoking, past cervical cancer, or DES exposure in the womb.

Warning Signs to Watch

Sign What It Feels Like
Bleeding after sex Spotting or bleeding after intimacy
Watery discharge Clear or pink fluid, sometimes smelly
Pain during sex Discomfort or burning
Lump in vagina Firm mass you can feel

How We Check for It

Pap Smear

Catches early changes
Done every 3–5 years

Colposcopy + Biopsy

Zoom in on vagina
Tiny sample taken

Treatment That Works

Early Stage

Laser or topical cream
Removes bad cells

Middle Stage

Radiation
Shrinks tumor

Advanced

Surgery + chemo
Removes cancer

Pap Smear: First Defense

How: Quick swab of vagina and cervix

Time: 3–5 minutes

Pain: Mild discomfort

Result: 3–5 days

Colposcopy: See Clearly

Magnifying scope looks inside vagina.
Small biopsy if needed.

  • 10-minute visit
  • Light spotting after
  • Results in 1 week

Laser Ablation: Burn Away Cancer

High-energy laser removes abnormal cells.
Done in clinic.
No cutting.
Back to normal in 2–4 weeks.

Surgery: When Needed

Partial Vaginectomy

Removes part of vagina
Reconstructs with skin graft

Full Vaginectomy

Removes entire vagina
With radiation or chemo

Dr. Bruce Semo’s Vaginal Health Clinic

Every Friday at Irys Medical Center

  • Free vaginal check
  • Same-day Pap smear
  • Colposcopy on-site
  • Laser treatment within 48 hours
  • Surgery within 7 days
  • Follow-up in 3 weeks

“Any change down there? Come see me.”

Book Check-Up