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Vulvar cancer surgery Paris — Dr Jérémie Zeitoun
Dr J. Zeitoun
Gynaecological Cancers · Paris 8th & Neuilly

Vulvar cancer Vulvar Cancer Dr Jérémie Zeitoun · Surgeon Paris 8th

A rare tumour treated primarily by surgery when localised. Management depends on tumour size, location and lymph node involvement.

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Understanding Histology Warning signs Your pathway Surgery Recovery Your questions
What it is

Vulvar cancer: understanding the condition

Being told you have vulvar cancer is a shock. This cancer is often diagnosed at a localised stage when symptoms are addressed promptly. Treatment is based on surgery, sometimes combined with other treatments depending on the situation.

Vulvar cancer develops in the vulvar region — mainly on the labia majora. In 90% of cases, it is a squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva. Persistent itching, a wound that won't heal, or a change in the appearance of the vulvar skin are the most common warning signs.

Among the risk factors for vulvar cancer: lichen sclerosus, HPV infection (types 16 and 18), smoking, and immunosuppression. The median age at diagnosis is 77 years in France — but this cancer can occur at any age.

Reference: Institut National du Cancer (INCa) — ESGO 2023 guidelines on vulvar cancer.

Would you like rapid surgical management or a second opinion on your diagnosis or treatment plan?

Prognosis linked to lymph nodes
The most important prognostic factor is inguinal lymph node involvement. Early surgical management with sentinel node analysis provides precise information and avoids unnecessary dissection.
An early warning symptom
Lichen sclerosus and VIN (vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia) are the main precancerous lesions. Persistent itching is often the first sign — addressed early, it prevents late diagnosis.
Tailored management
Stage, histological type, age, location — every case is discussed at a multidisciplinary meeting before defining treatment. Surgery is adapted to each situation, preserving function as much as possible.
Histological type

Histology: squamous cell carcinoma, VIN, lichen sclerosus

The histological type — the nature of the cells analysed under the microscope — directly guides treatment and prognosis. In vulvar cancer, squamous cell carcinoma accounts for the vast majority of cases.

Squamous cell carcinoma
The most common — approximately 90% of vulvar cancers. Two pathways: HPV-related (younger women, preceded by VIN) or lichen sclerosus-related (older women, HPV-independent). Grade specifies aggressiveness.
Melanoma & rare types
Vulvar melanoma accounts for approximately 5% of cases — its treatment differs from squamous cell carcinoma. Adenocarcinomas (Bartholin glands) and other types are exceptional. The exact histological type is determined by the pathologist from the biopsy.
VIN & lichen sclerosus
VIN (vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia) is the HPV-related precancerous lesion. Lichen sclerosus is the main non-HPV precancerous lesion. Neither necessarily progresses to cancer — but regular dermatological follow-up is essential.
Symptoms

Symptoms of vulvar cancer: signs to know

Vulvar cancer is often detected at a localised stage precisely because it causes recognisable signs. Consult promptly if you have any of these signs persisting for several weeks.

Persistent vulvar itching (vulvar pruritus) — most common sign
A wound or ulceration that won't heal
Change in vulvar appearance (white area, nodule, thickening)
Abnormal bleeding or discharge
Vulvar pain or burning
Mass or swelling in the groin (inguinal adenopathy)
Discomfort or pain during intercourse

Do you have any of these signs, particularly persistent itching or a lesion that won't heal? Don't face this uncertainty alone — a consultation will quickly clarify what you are dealing with.

How it works

Management of vulvar cancer in Paris

From the first appointment to the end of treatment, here is what happens in practice. Every decision is discussed at a multidisciplinary meeting and with you.

1
The initial consultation
You come with your results (biopsy report, pathology results). We take time to read everything together, answer your questions, and explain what was found — without jargon. No decision is made at this stage.
2
Imaging assessment
A pelvic MRI is requested to assess the local extent of the vulvar tumour — depth of invasion, relationship with the urethra, vagina and anus. A PET-CT may be requested depending on the situation to look for suspicious lymph nodes or distant metastases.
3
Multidisciplinary team meeting (MDT)
Your case is presented to a meeting with several specialist doctors — surgeon, oncologist, radiation oncologist, radiologist. Together, they decide on the best treatment plan for you. This is mandatory in France for all cancers.
4
Pre-operative consultation
Before the operation, a consultation with the anaesthetist is arranged. We explain exactly what will happen on the day, how to prepare, and what to expect in the recovery room.
5
The operation and immediate recovery
Surgery takes place at Clinique Hartmann (Neuilly-sur-Seine), 10 minutes from Paris. Hospitalisation generally lasts 3 to 5 days depending on the extent of surgery.
6
Follow-up
Regular follow-up appointments are scheduled. If additional treatments are needed (radiotherapy, chemotherapy), they are coordinated with your specialists. The aim is to support you until you return to normal life.
Surgery

Vulvar cancer surgery: vulvectomy & sentinel node

The type of operation depends on tumour size, location, and the multidisciplinary team's decision. Here is what each procedure involves in practice.

Vulvectomy

The reference operation — removes all or part of the vulva

What it is. Vulvectomy removes all or part of the vulva depending on tumour extent and lesion location. It may be partial (wide local excision) or total. It is the reference operation for vulvar cancer. The aim is to achieve clear surgical margins.

When it is proposed. In the vast majority of cases of invasive vulvar cancer where surgery is possible. The extent of surgery is adapted to each situation, preserving function and appearance as much as possible.

How it works. The operation lasts 1 to 3 hours depending on associated procedures (with or without inguinal dissection). It is performed under general anaesthesia. Hospitalisation generally lasts 3 to 5 days at Clinique Hartmann.

What about my ovaries? Vulvar surgery does not involve the uterus or ovaries. You will not enter menopause as a result of this operation.

Wound healing. Vulvar wound healing is often difficult and prolonged — 4 to 8 weeks on average, sometimes longer. Healing complications (wound dehiscence, partial necrosis, local infection) are common after vulvectomy. Daily local wound care is required, and home nursing follow-up is systematically arranged on discharge.

Inguinal sentinel lymph node

A technique that avoids removing too many lymph nodes unnecessarily

What it is for. When cancer spreads, it first passes through the inguinal lymph nodes. The sentinel node is the first lymph node the cancer would reach if it spread. If this node is clear, a complete inguinal dissection is avoided along with its complications.

How it is done. Most commonly using an isotopic technique: a radioactive tracer is injected around the tumour the day before or morning of surgery. This tracer travels to the inguinal sentinel node, detected in the operating theatre using a gamma probe. It is removed for pathological analysis.

If the sentinel node is not identified, a complete inguinal dissection is performed.

Inguinal lymph node dissection

To check whether cancer has spread to the groin lymph nodes

What it is. Inguinal dissection involves removing the lymph nodes from the groin — on one or both sides depending on tumour location. These nodes are analysed to determine whether cancer cells have spread.

The main risk. Lymphoedema — leg swelling due to disruption of lymphatic circulation. This risk exists but is limited, especially when the sentinel node technique avoids extensive dissection. Specialist physiotherapy can prevent and treat it.

Radiotherapy & chemotherapy

Additional treatments depending on results

Radiotherapy may be recommended after surgery in cases of insufficient surgical margins or lymph node involvement. For locally advanced tumours not initially operable, concurrent chemoradiotherapy may be proposed as first-line treatment.

Chemotherapy is less commonly used in vulvar cancer. It is reserved for advanced or metastatic disease, often in combination with radiotherapy.

The decision is made at the MDT after analysis of the surgical specimen, and discussed with you at a dedicated consultation.

A question about the type of operation that applies to you? I explain everything during a consultation.

After surgery

After vulvar surgery: what to expect

Surgery is not the end of the journey. Here is what you can concretely expect in the weeks and months that follow.

Hospitalisation
3 to 5 days minimum
Vulvectomy alone: 3 to 4 days at Clinique Hartmann. With associated inguinal dissection: 5 days or more depending on recovery.
Return to work
Several weeks to several months
Variable depending on the extent of surgery, complications and type of work. An extensive vulvectomy may require prolonged absence. Each situation is different.
Physical activity
Very gradual resumption
Walking is encouraged as soon as possible. Any sporting activity depends on complete healing — which may take several months.
Intimate life
Often a significant impact
Vulvectomy can profoundly affect intimate life and body image. These subjects are addressed during consultation, without taboo.
Psychological support
Essential accompaniment
This surgery may be experienced as a profound assault on identity and femininity. Psychological support is an integral part of care — it may be proposed from the time of diagnosis.
Follow-up appointments
Close surveillance
The surveillance schedule is defined at the MDT according to stage and treatment received. A clinical examination is performed at each consultation.
Would you like a second opinion on your diagnosis or treatment plan?
Send your biopsy, MRI and report. I respond within 48 hours.
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Your questions

Frequently asked questions about vulvar cancer

The most common questions asked in consultation. Ask yours at your appointment.

What is vulvar cancer?

Vulvar cancer develops in the vulvar region — mainly on the labia majora. It is a rare gynaecological cancer, representing 3 to 5% of gynaecological cancers. It mainly affects post-menopausal women, but can occur at any age. In 90% of cases it is a squamous cell carcinoma, often preceded by a precancerous lesion (HPV-related VIN or lichen sclerosus).

Does persistent vulvar itching necessarily mean cancer?

No, not necessarily. Vulvar itching often has a benign cause — lichen sclerosus, thrush, eczema. But symptoms persisting for several weeks warrant a consultation. A biopsy quickly establishes what you are dealing with.

What is a vulvectomy?

Vulvectomy removes all or part of the vulva depending on tumour extent and location. It may be partial (wide local excision) or total, with or without inguinal lymph node dissection. It is the reference operation for vulvar cancer. The aim is to achieve clear surgical margins.

What is the sentinel lymph node in vulvar cancer?

The sentinel lymph node is the first inguinal lymph node the cancer would reach if it spread. A radioactive tracer is injected around the tumour to identify it. If this node is clear, a complete inguinal dissection — and its complications (lymphoedema) — is avoided. The technique is standard for tumours less than 4 cm without clinical lymph node involvement.

Will surgery affect my ovaries?

No. Vulvar cancer surgery does not involve the uterus or ovaries. It targets the vulvar tumour and the inguinal lymph nodes if necessary. You will not enter menopause as a result of this operation.

How long will I be in hospital?

For vulvectomy alone: 3 to 4 days at Clinique Hartmann in Neuilly-sur-Seine. With inguinal dissection: 4 to 5 days depending on recovery. Home nursing follow-up is arranged if needed.

Will I need treatment after the operation?

This depends on the results of the analysis of the surgical specimen — particularly the surgical margins and lymph node involvement. Radiotherapy may be recommended if margins are insufficient or lymph nodes are involved. Chemotherapy is reserved for advanced disease. The decision is made at the MDT after the operation.

Can I request a second opinion?

Absolutely. Requesting a second opinion is a right, and a perfectly normal approach. I offer dedicated consultations for this purpose — in person in Paris 8th or at Clinique Hartmann. A clinical examination and direct review of results are essential to give you a serious opinion.

Vulvar cancer is a rare condition that requires expert surgical management at a centre with specific experience in vulvar surgery. In Paris, Dr Jérémie Zeitoun manages vulvar cancers at Clinique Hartmann (Neuilly-sur-Seine) and consults at 241 rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, Paris 8th. Every case is presented at a multidisciplinary meeting before any surgical decision.

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Come with your questions, your results, your concerns. We take the time to discuss everything together.

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Fees & Reimbursement

Transparent pricing

Dr Zeitoun practises as a private specialist (Sector 2) and charges fees above the standard national rate. French national health insurance reimburses on the basis of the standard rate — this is improved for cancer patients (ALD 30). Your complementary health insurance may cover additional fees depending on your policy.

Additional fees
A detailed quote is systematically provided before any procedure. No quote is issued without a prior consultation.
Complementary health insurance
Your complementary health insurance may cover all or part of the additional fees. Please check with your insurer.
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