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Vulvar Cancer Symptoms: Early Signs and When to See a Doctor

16 Mar, 2026

Vulvar Cancer Symptoms: Early Signs Every Woman Should Know

Table of Contents

Vulvar cancer starts in the vulva, the outer part of the female genitalia, including the labia, clitoris, and skin around the vaginal opening.

Most women first notice something through a shift in the appearance or feel of the vulvar skin, though changes typically show up gradually. However, many early signs look a lot like everyday conditions such as yeast infections or contact dermatitis.

The National Cancer Institute notes that HPV infection plays a role in roughly half of all vulvar cancers. The key vulvar cancer symptoms to pay attention to are itching, burning, bleeding, and skin changes lasting two weeks or longer.

This health article explores the early and late-stage vulvar cancer symptoms, conditions that mimic them, and when a doctor visit makes sense.

Key Highlights

  • Persistent vulvar itching that does not improve with over-the-counter treatment is one of the most frequently reported early signs
  • A doctor should check a lump, thickened patch, or wart-like growth on the vulva
  • A sore or ulcer that has not healed after a few weeks is a recognized warning sign
  • Skin color changes, whether white, red, or noticeably darker, may carry clinical significance
  • Unexplained vulvar bleeding with no link to menstruation deserves medical attention
  • Because vulvar cancer symptoms mimic benign conditions, only clinical examination can tell the difference

Where Do Vulvar Cancer Symptoms Show Up?

The labia majora and labia minora are the most common locations, but any part of the vulva can be affected. Some women notice a visible change first. Others feel itching or burning before anything looks different.

Good to know: Not every woman will see something unusual early on. A sensation that keeps returning, even without a visible cause, deserves a medical conversation.

Subtle changes are easy to write off. A rough patch, a faint color shift, itching that comes and goes. None of these screams urgency, which is why vulvar cancer often gets picked up later than it should.

What Are the Early Symptoms of Vulvar Cancer?

Early vulvar cancer symptoms usually stay in one area. Many women wait weeks before mentioning them, especially when they feel like a familiar complaint.

Signs that may show up early:

  • Vulvar itching that does not clear up with treatment for common causes
  • A lump, bump, or patch of hardened skin on the vulva
  • A sore that refuses to heal within a few weeks
  • Skin that has turned white, red, or darker than the tissue around it
  • Burning or tenderness focused on one spot
  • A rough or wart-like growth on the vulvar skin

When Symptoms Suggest the Disease Has Progressed

Later-stage vulvar cancer makes itself harder to ignore. Pain that will not settle, bleeding unrelated to periods, and unusual discharge can develop.

Groin swelling may appear if cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes. Ulcers can grow deeper, and urination may become uncomfortable.

Note: These symptoms are not proof of cancer by themselves, but they signal that prompt evaluation is the right call.

The short version: Any combination of worsening pain, new groin swelling, and non-healing ulcers should move a gynecology appointment to the top of the list.

Comparing Early and Advanced Vulvar Cancer Symptoms

Symptom Early Stage Later Stage
Itching Localized, persistent May not respond to any treatment
Skin changes Mild color variation, slight thickening Larger ulcers, deeper tissue changes
Lumps Small bump or thickened patch Bigger mass, possibly extending nearby
Bleeding Absent or very minor Unrelated to menstruation
Pain Mild burning or tenderness More intense, may affect urination
Groin area Usually unaffected A swelling or a lump may appear

Can These Symptoms Be Confused with Something Else?

Quite often. Itching that will not quit is also a hallmark of yeast infections, bacterial vaginosis, and contact dermatitis, all far more common than vulvar cancer. A lingering sore might first be chalked up to friction.

Lichen sclerosus deserves mention here. This long-term skin condition causes white, thin, fragile vulvar skin and produces changes that closely mirror early vulvar cancer. Bartholin gland cysts can present as a vulvar lump too.

Common confusion: A woman treating herself for a yeast infection repeatedly without relief may need a clinical exam to rule out something else entirely.

A helpful perspective: The overlap between benign vulvar conditions and early vulvar cancer is exactly why self-diagnosis has limits. A doctor can distinguish between them with a visual exam and, if needed, a biopsy.

HPV, Lichen Sclerosus, and Vulvar Symptoms

HPV infection is tied to a meaningful share of vulvar cancers, especially squamous cell types more common in younger women. Lichen sclerosus is associated with a modestly higher long-term risk, though most women who have it never develop cancer.

When Should You See a Doctor?

Any vulvar symptom lasting more than two to three weeks without improving deserves a professional look. Schedule a gynecology visit if:

  • Itching, burning, or pain has persisted for several weeks with no relief
  • A new lump or growth has appeared on the vulva
  • A sore simply is not healing
  • Vulvar skin color or texture has shifted noticeably
  • You have had unexplained bleeding outside your period

What Happens Once You Report Symptoms?

Your doctor will examine the external genitalia, looking at the skin and checking for lumps or sores. If a closer look is needed, a colposcopy or vulvar biopsy may come next. A biopsy means a small piece of tissue is sent to a lab, and the result confirms or rules out cancer.

What this means in practice: A biopsy sounds daunting, but it is a brief procedure usually done under local anesthesia. Results typically come back within a week.

Paying Attention to Vulvar Symptoms: HCG's Words

Vulvar cancer symptoms tend to be quiet. Itching that will not stop, sores that refuse to heal, lumps, shifts in skin color, and unexplained bleeding are all worth acting on rather than waiting out.

A few steps help if you have spotted changes. Write down when the symptoms started. Resist the urge to keep self-treating without a diagnosis. Book a gynecology appointment once symptoms have lasted beyond two to three weeks. Bring a note of your symptoms and what you have tried. Ask what comes next if the cause is not obvious.

At HCG, gynecologic oncology care is shaped around catching problems early and getting the assessment right from the start. The clinical team collaborates across specialties so each patient receives a clear, coordinated plan.

If vulvar symptoms have been on your mind, a specialist consultation is a sensible move. Timely attention gives both you and your care team more room to work with.

Frequently Asked Questions

Persistent itching, a lump or thickened spot, a non-healing sore, skin color changes, and localized burning are commonly reported. Any of these lasting beyond two to three weeks should be evaluated.

A raised lump, thickened patch, wart-like growth, or open sore is common. White, red, or darker skin patches may also appear, though no two cases look exactly alike.

Yes. Yeast infections, contact dermatitis, and lichen sclerosus produce overlapping symptoms. A clinical exam and biopsy are the surest ways to tell them apart.

Not at all. Most vulvar itching is benign. Itching persisting beyond two to three weeks without a clear cause is worth a medical check.

Unexplained vulvar bleeding unrelated to periods or intercourse can be a symptom. Discuss any such bleeding with a doctor.

A doctor performs a clinical examination. If anything looks suspicious, a biopsy confirms or rules out cancer.

There is a modest association. Most women with lichen sclerosus will not develop vulvar cancer, but regular follow-up and flagging new symptoms are advised.

The doctor inspects the vulva visually and by touch. Based on findings, colposcopy or biopsy may be recommended.

Disclaimer: This information is intended to educate patients and caregivers. It does not replace professional medical advice. All treatment decisions should be made in consultation with a qualified doctor.

References

- Mayo Clinic | Vulvar Cancer - Symptoms and Causes | https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/vulvar-cancer/symptoms-causes/syc-20368051

- NHS UK | Symptoms of Vulval Cancer | https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/vulval-cancer/symptoms/

- Cancer Research UK | Symptoms of Vulval Cancer | https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/vulval-cancer/symptoms

- NCI | Vulvar Cancer Patient Version | https://www.cancer.gov/types/vulvar

- Cleveland Clinic | Vulvar Cancer: Symptoms, Causes and Treatment | https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/6220-vulvar-cancer

- CDC | Symptoms of Vaginal and Vulvar Cancers | https://www.cdc.gov/vaginal-vulvar-cancers/symptoms/index.html

- American Cancer Society | Vulvar Cancer Signs and Symptoms | https://www.cancer.org/cancer/types/vulvar-cancer/detection-diagnosis-staging/signs-symptoms.html

- Johns Hopkins Medicine | Vulvar Cancer | https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/vulvar-cancer

- MedlinePlus | Vulvar Cancer | https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000902.htm

- PMC/NIH | Vulvar Cancer: Epidemiology, Clinical Presentation, and Management | https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4374790/

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