My Unexpected Diagnosis: Connecting PCOS, Missed Periods, and Uterine Cancer
At 48, I had battled PCOS for decades. My cycles were unpredictable—sometimes absent for six months. I dismissed heavy bleeding and spotting as normal for my condition. When I finally sought care for persistent pelvic pressure, an ultrasound revealed thickened uterine lining. The biopsy confirmed endometrial cancer, specifically endometrioid adenocarcinoma, often linked to unopposed estrogen from anovulatory cycles in PCOS. I wish I had known that women with PCOS face up to a three-fold increased risk of uterine cancer due to chronic estrogen exposure without progesterone balance.
What Every Woman with PCOS Should Know About Their Period
Track your cycle meticulously. In my book The CFP Method, I emphasize that periods longer than 35 days or absent for 90+ days signal potential endometrial hyperplasia, a precancerous state. Don't accept "that's just PCOS" from providers. Request annual endometrial thickness checks via transvaginal ultrasound after age 40, especially if you carry extra weight. My experience taught me that irregular bleeding isn't benign—it's a red flag. Combine this with managing diabetes and blood pressure, common PCOS companions that amplify risks.
The Critical Role of Cortisol and Stress Hormones in PCOS Weight Struggles
Chronic stress elevates cortisol, which worsens insulin resistance and promotes abdominal fat storage—exactly what makes hormonal weight loss feel impossible. Cortisol also disrupts progesterone production, fueling estrogen dominance that drives uterine lining overgrowth. In the CFP Weight Loss approach, we target this by incorporating short daily stress resets: 10-minute walks, breathwork, and consistent sleep before 10 PM. These lower cortisol by 20-30% within weeks, based on clinical patterns I've observed. For beginners with joint pain, start with seated movements—no gym required. This directly addresses why past diets failed: they ignored the stress-hormone axis.
Practical Steps to Protect Your Health Starting Today
First, schedule a gynecologic exam if your periods have been irregular for over a year. Discuss metformin or lifestyle interventions for insulin sensitivity, which can reduce cancer risk by balancing hormones. Adopt a simple anti-inflammatory plate: half non-starchy vegetables, quarter protein, quarter complex carbs like quinoa. Avoid sugar spikes that exacerbate cortisol. Build community support—embarrassment shouldn't delay help. Many in our program reverse prediabetes markers while losing 15-25 pounds in three months by focusing on these root causes rather than calorie counting. Your body isn't broken; it needs the right hormonal support. Early awareness saved my life—let it guide yours.