There are several traditional
treatments for patients with cancer of the colon. Three kinds of
treatments are available:
- surgery (taking out the cancer)
- radiation therapy (using high-dose x-rays or other
high-energy rays to kill cancer cells)
- chemotherapy (using drugs to kill cancer cells)
Surgery is the most common
treatment of all stages of cancer of the colon. A doctor may take out the
cancer from the colon using one of the following:
If the cancer is
found at a very early stage, the doctor may take out the cancer without
cutting into the abdomen. Instead, the doctor may put a tube through the
rectum into the colon and cut the tumor out. This is called a local
excision. If the cancer is found in a small bulging piece of tissue
(called a polyp), the operation is called a polypectomy.
If the
cancer is larger, the doctor will take out the cancer and a small amount
of healthy tissue around it (bowel or colon resection). The healthy parts
of the colon are then sewn together (anastomosis). The doctor will also
take out lymph nodes near the intestine and look at them under the
microscope to see if they contain cancer.
If the doctor is not
able to sew the colon back together, he or she will make an opening
(stoma) on the outside of the body for waste to pass out of the body. This
is called a colostomy. Sometimes, the colostomy is only needed until the
colon has healed, and then it can be reversed. However, the doctor may
have to take out the entire lower colon and the colostomy is permanent. If
a patient has a colostomy, a special bag will need to be worn to collect
body wastes. This special bag, which sticks to the skin around the stoma
with a special glue, can be thrown away after it is used. This bag does
not show under clothing, and most people take care of these bags
themselves.
Radiation therapy is the use of x-rays or other
high-energy rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation may
come from a machine outside the body (external radiation therapy) or from
putting materials that contain radiation through thin plastic tubes
(internal radiation therapy) in the intestine area. Radiation can be used
alone or in addition to surgery and/or chemotherapy.
Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells.
Chemotherapy may be taken by pill, or it may be put into the body by
inserting a needle into a vein. A patient may be given chemotherapy
through a tube that will be left in the vein while a small pump gives the
patient constant treatment over a period of weeks. Chemotherapy is called
a systemic treatment because the drug enters the bloodstream, travels
through the body, and can kill cancer cells outside the colon. If the
cancer has spread to the liver, the patient may be given chemotherapy
directly into the artery going to the liver.
If the doctor removes
all the cancer that can be seen at the time of the operation, the patient
may be given chemotherapy after surgery to kill any cancer cells that are
left. Chemotherapy given after an operation to a person who has no cancer
cells that can be seen is called adjuvant chemotherapy.
Biological treatment tries to get the body to fight cancer.
It uses materials made by the body or made in a laboratory to boost,
direct, or restore the body's natural defenses against disease. Biological
treatment is sometimes called biological response modifier (BRM) therapy
or immunotherapy.
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