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Adrenocortical Carcinoma
There are two adrenal glands, one on the top of each kidney. They are shaped like triangles, and each is about ½ inch high and 3 inches long. Each gland has two parts. The medulla is the inner part of the adrenal gland. It makes hormones called catecholamines, which include adrenaline and noradrenaline. These “stress hormones” increase alertness, strength, and speed in an emergency. They also affect heart rate, blood pressure, and sweating.
The outer part of the adrenal gland is called the cortex. It makes hormones that impact blood pressure, metabolism, and how the body uses fats, carbohydrates, and proteins.
These include:
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
- Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia type 2 (MEN2)
- Von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL)
- Neurofibromatosis type 1, also known as von Recklinghausen’s disease
- Paraganglioma syndrome
- Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
What are the symptoms of adrenal tumors?
Adrenal tumors may or may not cause symptoms, which depend on the type of hormone made by the tumor. If you have an adrenal tumor, your symptoms may include:
- High blood pressure (hypertension)
- Women: Excess facial and body hair, deep voice or problems with menstruation
- Men: Breast tenderness or enlargement, lowered sex drive and/or erectile dysfunction
- Excess fat in the upper back between the shoulders or in the neck
- Round, full face, also called “moon” face
- Thin skin that bruises easily and heals slowly
- Purple-red stretch marks on the belly, thighs or breasts
- Fatigue
- Muscle weakness or spasms
- Weight gain or loss
- Diabetes
- Insomnia or other sleep disorders
- Low potassium levels
- Headache
- Rapid or irregular heartbeats
- Feelings of anxiety, panic, fear
- Pallor (paleness)
- Dizziness/lightheadedness with standing
- Tremor
- Sweating
- Temporary/intermittent paralysis (rare)
How are adrenal tumors diagnosed?
Adrenal tumors are diverse and can be challenging to diagnose. It is essential that an endocrinologist familiar with adrenal tumors recommends which tests you should have and analyzes your test results.
Our network of experts has a high level of expertise in diagnosing adrenal tumors. They use the latest techniques and technology to give you the most accurate and concise diagnosis possible, including radiographic scanning, adreno-venous sampling, and biochemical testing.
Comprehensive genetic testing and counseling are available if your family members have certain inherited disorders.
If you have symptoms that might signal an adrenal tumor, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health and your medical history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have an adrenal gland tumor or if treatment is working.
Blood tests to evaluate levels of certain hormones, including cortisol, aldosterone, plasma metanephrines and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), or chemicals such as sodium and potassium.
Urine tests, which may include 24-hour urine collection tests.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- Nuclear medicine PET (positron emission tomography)
- MIBG (meta-iodobenzylguanidine) scans
There are no known lifestyle changes to lower the risk of developing adrenal tumors.
What is the treatment for adrenal tumors?
Treatment Approach
Patients with adrenal tumors need utmost care, hence we provide you with expert treatment with a team having a higher level of experience that can have a direct impact on your chance for successful treatment.
We take opinions from renowned endocrinologists who are among the most skilled and recognized in the world. They work with teams of other specialists to offer you the most advanced treatment with the least impact on the body.
Our network gives you access to surgeons performing a large number of surgeries for adrenal tumors each year, using the least invasive and most effective techniques. They are highly skilled in minimally invasive laparoscopic procedures, which may result in shorter hospital stays, less blood loss and shorter recovery times than with standard surgery techniques.
Adrenal Tumor Treatments
If you are diagnosed with an adrenal tumor, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the type of the disease and your general health. Your treatment for adrenal tumors will be customized to your particular needs.
One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the disease or help relieve symptoms.
Surgery to remove one or both adrenal glands.
Systemic therapies, Systemic therapies, including chemotherapy, molecularly targeted therapies and nuclear medicine agents.
Medicines to balance levels of hormones or replace deficient hormones.
Anal Cancer
Anal cancer is a type of cancer that forms in tissues of the anus. The anus is the opening of the rectum to the outside of the body and at the end of the GI tract.
Sometimes anal cancer causes no symptoms at all. But bleeding is often the first sign of the disease. The bleeding is usually minor. At first, most people assume the bleeding is caused by hemorrhoids (painful, swollen veins in the anus and rectum that may bleed).
While symptoms are more likely to be caused by benign (non-cancer) conditions, like hemorrhoids, anal fissures, or anal warts, if you experience anal bleeding, you must have it checked by a doctor so that the cause can be found and treated, if needed.
Anal Cancer
Causes and Risk Factors
These include:
- Being infected with human papillomavirus (HPV).
- Having many sexual partners.
- Having receptive anal intercourse (anal sex).
- Being older than 50 years.
- Frequent anal redness, swelling, and soreness.
- Having anal fistulas (abnormal openings).
- Smoking cigarettes.
What are the symptoms of anal tumors?
These and other signs and symptoms may be caused by anal cancer or by other conditions. Check with your doctor if you have any of the following:
- Bleeding from the anus or rectum.
- Pain or pressure in the area around the anus.
- Itching or discharge from the anus.
- A lump near the anus.
- A change in bowel habits.
How are anal tumors diagnosed?
If you have symptoms that may signal anal cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health, your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits, and your family history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have anal cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- Anoscopy: A short tube with a camera is inserted into the anus and lower rectum. The doctor examines the anus and can biopsy the tissue.
- Proctoscopy: A short tube with a camera is inserted into the anus to the rectum. The doctor examines the anus and can biopsy the tissue.
- Double-contrast barium enema (DCBE): Barium is a chemical that allows the bowel lining to show up on an X-ray. You will be given an enema with a barium solution, and then X-rays will be taken.
- Colonoscopy
- Virtual colonoscopy or CT (computed tomography) colonoscopy
- CT (computed tomography) scans; also called CAT scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET/CT (positron emission tomography) scans
- Endo-anal or endorectal ultrasound: An endoscope is inserted into the anus. A probe at the end of the endoscope bounces high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) off organs to make an image (sonogram). Also called endosonography.
- Chest X-Ray
What is the treatment for adrenal tumors?
Anal cancer often can be treated successfully with chemotherapy combined with radiation therapy. If the cancer has spread (metastasized), a combination of therapies including surgery as well as participation in a clinical trial may be suggested.
The team of specialists focusing on your care will discuss with you the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including:
- The stage of anal cancer
- Location of the tumor in the anus
- If you have human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or other immunosuppressed condition
- If the cancer has just been diagnosed or if it has returned after being treated
- Your age and general health
Your treatment for anal cancer will be customized to your particular needs. Treatments for anal cancer, which may be used to fight the cancer or help relieve symptoms, may include:
Surgery
Anal cancer surgery is most successful when performed by a specialist with a great deal of experience in the particular procedure. If surgery is needed to treat anal cancer, your surgeon may use one of the following procedures:
Local resection: The tumor, along with some of the tissue around it, is surgically removed.
Abdominoperineal resection (APR): The anus, the rectum and part of the colon are removed through an incision in the abdomen. The end of the intestine is attached to an opening (stoma) in the abdomen. Body waste leaves this opening and is collected in a plastic bag outside the body. This also is called a colostomy.
Chemotherapy
Our team of experts offer the most up-to-date and effective chemotherapy options to treat anal cancer.
Radiation Therapy
New radiation therapy techniques allow doctors to target anal cancer tumors more precisely, delivering the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells.
Some anal cancers can be treated with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). This technique precisely targets the cancer and causes less damage to healthy tissue.
Targeted Therapies
Our experts are leading into the future of cancer treatment by planning innovative targeted therapies. These agents are specially designed to treat each cancer’s specific genetic/molecular profile to help your body fight the disease. Many of the doctors on our board who treat cancer are dedicated researchers who have pioneered and actively lead national and international clinical trials with novel targeted agents.
Appendix Cancer
The appendix is a thin pouch that is attached to the large intestine and sits in the lower right part of the stomach. Appendix cancer, which is very rare, occurs when cells in the appendix change and grow significantly. The tissue growth formed from the cells is called a tumor (commonly identified as malignant or benign).
Types of Appendix Cancer
Below are the three types of tumors that can develop in the appendix:
- Carcinoid tumors (commonly referred to as neuroendocrine tumors): A cancerous, rare type of tumor that grows slowly (about half of appendix cancers are carcinoid tumors). Many people with a carcinoid tumor have it for many years before it is detected.
- Mucinous neoplasms: These are generally benign and include appendix mucoceles as well as lesions with precancerous potential such as low-grade mucinous neoplasms (LAMN) of the appendix. If these LAMN lesions perforate or rupture, they can result in a rare condition called pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP).
- Appendix adenocarcinoma: These tumors begin as cells that line the inside of the appendix and are treated similarly to colorectal cancer. Signet ring cell adenocarcinoma is a very rare subset and tends to be more aggressive.
- Goblet cell carcinomas/adenocarcinoids: These tumors have features of both adenocarcinomas and carcinoids. They are more aggressive than carcinoid tumors.
Causes and Risk Factor
Risk factors vary from patient to patient. However, it is important to note that not all risk factors cause cancer. Risk factors for appendix cancer include:
- Smoking: Smokers are more likely to develop appendix cancer than nonsmokers.
- Family history: Patients who have a family history of appendix cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) syndrome are at greater risk of getting appendix cancer.
- Medical history: Patients who have a history of certain medical conditions such as atrophic gastritis or pernicious anemia, which affect the stomach’s ability to produce acid, are at greater risk.
- Age: Increasing age raises the chance of developing appendix cancer.
- Gender: Women are more likely to develop carcinoid tumors than men.
What are the symptoms of Appendix Cancer?
Symptoms vary from patient to patient and some patients experience no symptoms at all. However, the following symptoms may occur:
- Pain in the stomach or pelvis area
- Bloating
- Ascites (fluid in the abdomen)
How are Appendix tumors diagnosed?
Your physician will consider several factors when diagnosing appendix cancer such as your symptoms, age, medical history, and the type of cancer suspected. The following tests may be used to diagnose appendix cancer:
- Biopsy
- Computed tomography scan
- MRI
- Ultrasound
Treatment options depend on the type and stage of cancer. Your physician will discuss the best treatment options for you. The following treatments may be considered:
- Surgery (the most common treatment for appendix cancer)
The following types of surgeries may be performed:
- Appendectomy: An appendectomy is the removal of the appendix.
- Hemicolectomy: A hemicolectomy is typically performed for a carcinoid tumor that is larger than 2 cm. A portion of the colon that is next to your appendix is removed during this procedure.
- Cytoreductive surgery: Cytoreductive surgery is often recommended for non-carcinoid tumors (tumors that have spread). In this surgery, the tumor and surrounding fluid is removed.
- Peritonectomy: A peritonectomy might be recommended if cancer has spread beyond the colon and involves other areas of the abdomen. Your surgeon may recommend removing the peritoneum (the lining of the abdomen).
- Chemotherapy
- Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC)
Bladder Cancer
Bladder cancer is a disease that forms in the tissues of the bladder, and most cases of bladder cancer begin in cells that make up the lining of the bladder.
The bladder is an organ in the lower abdomen that stores urine, the waste produced when the kidneys filter the blood. The bladder expands and shrinks as it stores and empties urine. Urine passes from the kidneys into the bladder through tubes called ureters. A tube called the urethra, which is longer in men than women, then carries urine out of the body.
Bladder cancer is classified based on the type of cells it contains. The main types of bladder cancer are:
Transitional cell bladder cancer: About 90% of bladder cancers are transitional cell carcinomas – cancers that begin in the urothelial cells, which line the inside of the bladder. Cancer that is confined to the lining of the bladder is called non-invasive bladder cancer.
Squamous cell bladder cancer: This type of bladder cancer begins in squamous cells, which are thin, flat cells that may form in the bladder after long-term infection or irritation. These cancers occur less often than transitional cell cancers, but they may be more aggressive.
Adenocarcinoma: Bladder cancer that develops in the inner lining of the bladder as a result of chronic irritation and inflammation. This type of bladder cancer tends to be aggressive.
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for bladder cancer may include:
- Using tobacco, especially smoking cigarettes
- Being a male (Men are four times more likely than women to develop the disease.)
- Being over 40 years of age
- A personal history of chronic urinary tract infections or bladder infections
- Exposure to certain chemotherapy drugs or radiation treatments
- Exposure to certain chemicals or occupations that deal with certain chemicals: this includes those who work in the rubber, leather or chemical industry, hairdressers, printers, painters, machinists, metal workers, textile workers, truck drivers, and those who work at dry cleaners.
- Use of urinary catheters for a prolonged time
- Having a kidney transplant
- Having a history of kidney or bladder stones
- Drinking water with high levels of arsenic
- Prolonged use of the bacteria A. fang chi, found in a Chinese herb
- Certain genetic conditions, including hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC), otherwise known as Lynch syndrome
What are the symptoms of Bladder Cancer?
The most frequent bladder cancer symptom is blood in the urine (hematuria), which causes the urine to appear rusty or deep red. However, hematuria cannot always be detected by the naked eye, and it can be a symptom of other conditions such as kidney or bladder stones or urinary tract infections.
Other bladder cancer symptoms may include:
- Changes in bladder habits
- Painful urination
- Frequent urination
- Having the urge to urinate
These symptoms do not always mean you have bladder cancer. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Bladder Cancer diagnosed?
To diagnose bladder cancer, or to see if the cancer has spread, these tests may be performed:
- Physical exam
Imaging tests may be used to locate blockages and tumors and determine whether cancer has spread to other organs. - An intravenous pyelogram is an imaging test during which the patient is injected with dye and the radiologist observes with an X-ray the movement of that dye through the urinary tract. This X-ray will look at the collecting system of the kidneys to determine the presence of any irregularities. This is good for seeing small cancer locations and the upper urinary tract, and especially for detailing the kidneys, ureters, and bladder.
- CT or CAT scans are another form of X-ray, which creates a more detailed image of the body and organs. This is used to locate kidney or bladder blockages, and to determine staging, recommended therapy, and whether the bladder cancer has metastasized (spread to other parts of the body).
- MRI is another imaging form that creates very high-quality and detailed images of bladder tumors in addition to adjacent organs, such as the chest, pelvis, and abdomen, to locate any metastasis.
- Ultrasound imaging, without side effects or radiation, is noninvasive and looks primarily at the bladder and kidneys. It can locate small tract blocks and stones and also measures the bladder wall thickness.
- The gold standard for the evaluation of the lower urinary tract is a routine outpatient procedure called a cystoscopy. In the same way that a colonoscopy allows doctors to see inside the lower digestive tract, a cystoscopy provides a visual of the lower urinary tract and bladder lining.
Cystectomy (Bladder Removal) Surgery
When bladder cancer tumors completely invade the bladder’s muscular wall, the standard of care is to perform bladder removal surgery. Typically, complete removal of the bladder (radical cystectomy) is required.
Partial cystectomy is rare because the requirements are that the tumor is easily accessible and small in size and that there are no tumors in the rest of the bladder. This approach is usually used only if the cancer has not left its site of origin. Additionally, partial cystectomy may be an alternative option for nonmuscle-invasive bladder cancer if all other treatments fail.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy, used to treat cancer, is a special high-energy X-ray that is more powerful than the X-rays used for imaging studies. Radiation therapy is planned and executed in a way to kill cancer cells or alter their ability to reproduce, while the surrounding healthy cells are minimally affected.
Historically, radiation therapy alone has been used for muscle-invasive bladder cancer, but current treatment usually involves a combined approach of maximal local surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. The role of radiation therapy in this combined approach is to kill the bladder cancer cells in the bladder that are not visible to the surgeon. Chemotherapy is used to enhance the effects of the radiation and kill cells outside the bladder. Local lymph nodes are frequently radiated as part of the therapy to treat the microscopic cancer cells that may be there.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy uses chemical agents to interfere with replication and other normal functions of cells, resulting in tumor shrinkage or cancer cell death. The use of two or more chemotherapy drugs together is more effective than a single drug alone. There are several types of chemotherapy. The most common chemotherapeutic drug used in bladder cancer is cisplatin.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy is a cancer treatment approach that uses drugs and vaccines to harness the immune system’s natural ability to fight cancer, in the same way it fights off infections. The approach is still being researched and there is a lot left to learn, but clinical studies have shown that immunotherapy holds a lot of promise in its ability to treat a wide range of malignancies, including some types of bladder cancer.
There are a few FDA-approved immunotherapy drugs available for treating advanced and metastatic bladder cancer that have worsened after chemotherapy. Scientists are also investigating the possibility that combinations of immunotherapy drugs could be more effective than individual drugs.
Bone cancer
Bone cancer is a sarcoma (type of cancerous tumor) that starts in the bone. Other cancers may affect the bones, including cancers that metastasize, or spread, from other parts of the body, as well as non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and multiple myeloma.
Bone cancer types
There are several types of bone tumors. They are named according to the area of bone or tissue where they start and the type of cells they contain. Some bone tumors are benign (not cancer), and some are malignant (cancer). Bone cancer also is called sarcoma.
The most commonly found types of primary bone cancer are:
- Osteosarcoma or osteogenic sarcoma is the main type of bone cancer. It occurs most often in children and adolescents, and it accounts for about one-fourth of bone cancer in adults. More males than females get this cancer. About 1,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with osteosarcoma each year. It begins in bone cells, usually in the pelvis, arms or legs, especially the area around the knee.
- Chondrosarcoma is a cancer of cartilage cells. More than 40% of adult bone cancer is chondrosarcoma, making it the most prevalent bone cancer in adults. The average age of diagnosis is 51, and 70% of cases are in patients over 40. Chondrosarcoma tends to be diagnosed at an early stage and often is low grade. Many chondrosarcoma tumors are benign (not cancer). Tumors can develop anywhere in the body where there is cartilage, especially the pelvis, leg or arm.
- Ewing’s sarcoma is the second most prevalent type of bone cancer in children and adolescents, and the third most often found in adults. It accounts for about 8% of bone cancers in adults. Ewing’s sarcoma can start in bones, tissues, or organs, especially the pelvis, chest wall, legs, or arms.
Less-commonly found types of bone cancer include:
- Chordoma, which is found in 10% of adult bone cancer cases, usually in the spine and base of the skull
- Malignant fibrous histiocytoma/fibrosarcoma, which usually starts in connective tissue
- Fibrosarcoma, which often is benign and found in soft tissue in the leg, arm or jaw
- Secondary (or metastatic) bone cancer is cancer that spreads to the bone from another part of the body. This type of bone cancer is more prevalent than primary bone cancer. For more information about this type of cancer, see the type of primary cancer (where the cancer started).
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting bone cancer is a risk factor. However, having risk factors does not mean you will get bone cancer. Most people who develop bone cancer do not have any risk factors. If you have risk factors, it’s a good idea to discuss them with your healthcare provider.
Teenagers and young adults are at greatest risk of developing osteosarcoma, a type of bone cancer because it often is associated with growth spurts.
Some diseases that run in families can slightly increase the risk of bone cancer. These include:
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
- Rothmund-Thompson syndrome
- Retinoblastoma (an eye cancer in children)
- Multiple osteochondromas
- Genetic counseling may be right for you.
Other risk factors for bone cancer include:
- Paget’s disease
- Prior radiation therapy for cancer, especially treatment at a young age or with high doses of radiation
- Bone marrow transplant
What are the symptoms of Bone Cancer?
Bone cancer symptoms vary from person to person. They also depend on the size and location of the cancer.
If you have symptoms of bone cancer, they may include:
- Pain
- Swelling or tenderness in or near a joint
- Difficulty with normal movement
- Fatigue
- Fever
- Weight loss
- Anemia (low red blood cell count)
- Fractures
Having one or more of these symptoms does not mean you have bone cancer. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may indicate other health problems.
How is Bone Cancer diagnosed?
Accurate diagnosis is essential to successful treatment of bone cancer. The wrong kind of biopsy may make it more difficult later for the surgeon to remove all of the cancer without having to also remove all or part of the arm or leg. A biopsy that is not done correctly may cause the cancer to spread.
If your doctor thinks you may have bone cancer, it’s important to go to a cancer center with a specialized bone cancer program. You should look for a program that does as many diagnostic procedures as possible.
If you have symptoms that may signal bone cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health and your family history. One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Biopsy
A biopsy, which removes a tiny piece of bone, is used to confirm the presence of cancer cells. This is the only way to find out for certain if the tumor is cancer or another bone disease. The biopsy procedure needs to be done by a surgeon with experience in diagnosing and treating bone tumors.
There are two types of bone biopsy:
- Needle biopsy: A long, hollow needle is inserted through the skin to the area of bone to be tested. The needle removes a cylindrical sample of bone to look at under a microscope.
- Open or surgical biopsy: An incision (cut) is made, and the surgeon removes a tiny piece of bone for examination under a microscope.
Your doctor will decide which type of biopsy is best for you based on several factors, including the type and location of the tumor. If possible, the surgeon who performs the biopsy should also do the surgery to remove cancer.
Bone Cancer Staging
If you are diagnosed with bone cancer, your doctor will determine the stage (or extent) of the disease. Staging is a way of determining how much disease is in the body and where it has spread.
This information is important because it helps your doctor determine the best type of treatment for you and the outlook for your recovery (prognosis). Once the staging classification is determined, it stays the same even if treatment is successful or the cancer spreads.
Bone Cancer Stages
AJCC Staging System
One system that is used to stage all bone cancer is the American Joint Commission on Cancer (AJCC) system.
- T stands for features of the tumor (its size)
- N stands for spread to lymph nodes
- M is for metastasis (spread) to distant organs
- G is for the grade of the tumor
This information about the tumor, lymph nodes, metastasis, and grade is combined in a process called stage grouping.
The stage is then described in Roman numerals from I to IV (1-4).
T stages of bone cancer
- TX: Primary tumor can’t be measured
- T0: No evidence of the tumor
- T1: Tumor is 8 centimeters (around 3 inches) or less
- T2: Tumor is larger than 8 centimeters
- T3: Tumor is in more than one place on the same bone
N stages of bone cancer
- N0: The cancer has not spread to the lymph nodes near the tumor
- N1: The cancer has spread to nearby lymph nodes
M stages of bone cancer
- M0: The cancer has not spread anywhere outside of the bone or nearby lymph nodes
- M1: Distant metastasis (the cancer has spread)
- M1a: The cancer has spread only to the lung
- M1b: The cancer has spread to other sites (like the brain, the liver, etc)
Grades of bone cancer
- G1-G2: Low grade
- G3-G4: High grade
TNM stage grouping
After the T, N, and M stages and the grade of the bone cancer have been determined, the information is combined and expressed as an overall stage. The process of assigning a stage number is called stage grouping.
To determine the grouped stage of cancer using the AJCC system, find the stage number below that contains the T, N, and M stages and the proper grade.
Stage I: All stage I tumors are low-grade and have not yet spread outside of the bone.
- Stage 1A: T1, N0, M0, G1-G2: The tumor is 8 centimeters or less.
- Stage 1B: T2 or T3, N0, M0, G1-G2: The tumor is either larger than 8 centimeters or it is in more than one place on the same bone.
Stage II: Stage II tumors have not spread outside the bone (like stage I) but are high-grade.
- Stage 2A: T1, N0, M0, G3-G4: The tumor is 8 centimeters or less.
- Stage 2B: T2, N0, M0, G3-G4: The tumor is larger than 8 centimeters.
Stage III: T3, N0, M0, G3-G4: Stage 3 tumors have not spread outside the bone but are in more than one place on the same bone. They are high grade.
Stage IV: Stage IV tumors have spread outside of the bone they started in. They can be any grade.
- Stage 4A: Any T, N0, M1a, G1-G4: The tumor has spread to the lung.
- Stage 4B: Any T, N1, any M, G1-G4 OR Any T, any N, M1b, G1-G4: The tumor has spread to nearby lymph nodes or distant sites other than the lung (or both).
Even though the AJCC staging system is widely accepted and used for most cancers, bone cancer specialists tend to simplify the stages into localized and metastatic. Localized includes stages 1, 2, and 3, while metastatic is stage 4.
If you are diagnosed with bone cancer, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the type and stage of the cancer and your general health.
Your treatment for bone cancer will be customized to your particular needs.
One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat bone cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Surgery
Surgery is the main treatment for most bone cancers. Both the biopsy and surgery should be done by a surgeon with extensive experience in these procedures. A biopsy in the wrong location can cause surgical problems and lower your chances of successful treatment.
If at all possible, the same surgeon should perform both the biopsy and surgery. The biopsy will help the surgeon locate the tumor more precisely. The goal of surgery is to remove as much of the cancer as possible. If any cancer cells remain, they may grow and spread. To get as much of the cancer as possible, the surgeon performs a wide-excision surgery. This involves removing the cancer, as well as a margin of healthy tissue around it.
If the tumor is in an arm or leg, the surgeon almost always can perform limb-sparing surgery, which removes the cancer cells but allows you to keep full use of your leg or arm. To replace bone that is removed during surgery, a bone graft may be done or an internal device called an endoprosthesis may be implanted.
If this is not possible, an amputation, or removal of the limb, may be performed. Reconstructive surgery and/or a prosthesis will be needed. Rehabilitation is necessary after either procedure.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy may be recommended to treat osteosarcoma or Ewing’s sarcoma. In osteosarcoma, it is often given before surgery to shrink the tumor and make it easier to remove, and after surgery to destroy the remaining cancer cells. Chemotherapy is also used for bone cancer that has metastasized (spread) to the lungs or other organs.
Radiation Therapy
Bone cancer is not highly sensitive to radiation, so radiation usually is not a treatment. It sometimes may be given if the tumor cannot be operated on or if cancer cells remain after surgery. Radiation may help relieve symptoms if bone cancer returns. New radiation therapy techniques and remarkable skill allow doctors to target tumors more precisely, delivering the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells.
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. Targeted Therapy These newer agents are used to help fight some types of bone cancer, including chordoma. Targeted therapies attack cancer cells by using small molecules to block pathways that cells use to survive and multiply.
Brain Tumors
A tumor is a mass of tissue made up of cells that grow and multiply in an abnormal and uncontrolled way. The brain controls many important bodily functions; when a tumor grows into or presses on an area of the brain, it may stop that part of the brain from functioning normally.
A tumor may be either benign (not cancerous) or malignant (cancerous); both cause symptoms that require treatment:
- Benign brain and spinal cord tumors grow more slowly but can press on nearby areas of the brain. They rarely spread into other tissues and may recur (come back) after treatment.
- Malignant brain and spinal cord tumors are likely to grow quickly and spread into other brain tissue.
Brain tumors are classified as primary or secondary:
- Primary brain tumors develop inside the brain or spine and rarely spread outside of the brain or spine. Primary brain tumors are most commonly named after the cells from which they derive. Some types of primary brain tumors include:
- Glioblastoma
- Glioma
- CNS (central nervous system) Lymphoma
- Meningioma
- Secondary brain tumors are tumors found in the brain that have started somewhere else in the body. These are also known as metastatic brain tumors or brain metastases. Metastatic brain tumors are more common than primary brain tumors.
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting a brain tumor is a risk factor. Research is ongoing into the causes and risk factors of brain tumors. While no definite risk factors have been found for brain tumors, some factors may put you at increased risk, including:
- Prior radiation exposure to the brain, often as a treatment for another cancer
- Family history of certain conditions including:
- Neurofibromatosis type 1 and type 2
- Tuberous sclerosis
- von Hippel-Lindau disease
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
Some types of brain tumors may be passed down from one generation to the next if you have a family history of the conditions listed above. Genetic counseling may be right for you.
What are the symptoms of Brain Tumors?
Brain tumor symptoms depend on the area of the brain affected. Brain tumors can:
- Prior radiation exposure to the brain, often as a treatment for another cancer
- Family history of certain conditions including:
- Neurofibromatosis type 1 and type 2
- Tuberous sclerosis
- von Hippel-Lindau disease
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
- Invade and destroy brain tissue
- Put pressure on nearby tissue
- Take up space and increase pressure within the skull (intracranial pressure)
- Cause fluids to accumulate in the brain
- Block normal circulation of cerebrospinal fluid through the spaces within the brain
- Cause bleeding
Brain tumor symptoms vary from person to person. They may include:
How is Bladder Cancer diagnosed?
To diagnose bladder cancer, or to see if the cancer has spread, these tests may be performed:
- Headaches, which are often the first symptom. A headache due to a brain tumor usually becomes more frequent as time passes. It may not get better with over-the-counter pain medicine and it may come with nausea or vomiting. It can get worse when you lie down, bend over, or bear down, such as when you have a bowel movement.
- Seizures. Seizures can take many different forms, such as numbness, tingling, uncontrollable arm and leg movements, difficulty speaking, strange smells or sensations, staring, and unresponsive episodes or convulsions.
- Changes in mental function, mood, or personality. You may become withdrawn, moody, or inefficient at work. You may feel drowsy, confused, and unable to think. Depression and anxiety, especially if either develops suddenly, may be an early symptom of a brain tumor. You may become uninhibited or behave in ways you never have before.
- Changes in speech (trouble finding words, talking incoherently, inability to express or understand language)
- Changes in the ability to hear, smell, or see, including double or blurred vision
- Loss of balance or coordination
- Change in the ability to feel heat, cold, pressure, a light touch, or sharp objects
- Changes in pulse and breathing rates if the brain tumor compresses the brain stem
If you have a brain tumor, it is important to get the most accurate diagnosis possible. This will help your doctor pinpoint the tumor to give you the most advanced treatment with the least impact on your body.
Brain Tumor Diagnostic Tests
If you have symptoms that may signal a brain tumor, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health, your lifestyle, and your family history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have a brain tumor and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT (computed tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging)
Biopsy: While imaging tests may show an area where there may be a brain tumor, doctors need a tissue sample to definitively diagnose a primary brain tumor. Tissue samples are retrieved through a biopsy. Doctors can perform a biopsy by removing a small sample of tissue with a needle or removing all or part of a tumor through surgery. Your neurosurgeon will determine which type of biopsy is best for your tumor.
Lumbar puncture: A small amount of cerebrospinal fluid (clear liquid in and around the brain and spine) is removed with a needle and examined under a microscope. This test may be done if doctors suspect a tumor has spread to the layers of tissue that cover the brain (the meninges) and into the spinal fluid.
Molecular testing: Some primary brain tumors, including some of the most common types of gliomas, are defined by their key molecular features resulting from tumor cell mutations. These features can be used to diagnose a tumor, provide a more accurate prognosis, and enhance the treatment plan. Key mutations include:
- IDH mutation: Grade II and III gliomas are tested for this mutation. In general, IDH-mutated tumors have a better prognosis than tumors without the IDH mutation. Gliomas without the IDH mutation are also known as IDH wildtype.
- 1p/19q co-deletion: This molecular feature is required for an oligodendroglioma diagnosis. It refers to the loss of parts of chromosomes 1 and 19. Unlike the IDH mutation, which only affects one gene, the 1p/19q co-deletion involves a large segment of DNA. This mutation generally indicates that a tumor will be more responsive to chemotherapy.
- MGMT promoter methylation: Testing for the MGMT mutation is required for many brain tumor clinical trials. MGMT is an enzyme that can make cancer cells more resistant to therapy. MGMT tumor methylation generally indicates a better prognosis and may indicate a better response to chemotherapy.
Many cancers are organized by stages, which describe how much a cancer has spread. Primary brain tumors typically do not spread to other parts of the body, so they are not staged.
Instead, most brain tumors are graded on a scale developed by the World Health Organization. Tumor grading classifies tumor cells by how abnormal they look under the microscope and how quickly the tumor is dividing. Grade I tumors are the least aggressive, while grade IV tumors are the most aggressive.
Brain tumors can start at a low grade and over time become more aggressive and transform into high-grade tumors. They can also start as a high-grade brain tumor without ever being a low-grade tumor.
Brain tumor grades include:
- Grade I (low-grade): Grade I tumor cells are nearly identical to healthy cells. These tumors are slow-growing and are usually associated with long-term survival.
- Grade II: These tumor cells look slightly different than healthy cells. While they are still considered low-grade, grade II tumors are more aggressive than grade I tumors. A grade II tumor has the potential to transform into a higher-grade tumor.
- Grade III: Grade III tumor cells look abnormal and actively reproduce. Grade III tumors grow faster than grade II tumors and have the potential to transform to grade IV tumors.
- Grade IV (high-grade): Grade IV tumors are the most aggressive. Tumor cells do not look like normal cells and are actively reproducing and growing. There may be areas of dead cells in the tumor.
If you are diagnosed with a brain tumor, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the location and type of the cancer and your general health.
Your treatment for a brain tumor will be customized to your particular needs. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Surgery
Surgery usually is the first treatment for brain tumors. Even when complete removal is not possible surgery may be able to:
- Help reduce the tumor’s size
- Relieve symptoms
- Help doctors decide what other treatments are needed
The most common surgery for brain tumors is craniotomy, which involves opening the skull. Some brain tumors can be removed with little or no damage to the brain. However, many grow in areas that make them difficult or impossible to remove without destroying important parts of the brain.
MRI
When a brain tumor is in a challenging location, our neurosurgeons can use this innovative open MRI system that allows them to view the tumor during surgery. This helps them remove as much of the tumor as possible without damaging other parts of the brain.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy may be able to stop or slow the growth of brain tumors that cannot be removed with surgery. It may be used:
- Alone
- With chemotherapy to help the radiation work better or lessen its effect on normal parts of the brain
- With targeted therapies to destroy remaining cancer cells
Now most advanced radiation treatment methods, are:
- Gamma Knife radiosurgery, which is not surgery. It delivers a pinpoint dose of radiation from hundreds of angles.
- Focused radiation therapy, which is aimed directly at the tumor and immediately surrounding area
- Whole-brain radiation therapy, which may be needed if you have two or more brain tumors in different locations
- Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), which shapes the radiation beam to the shape of the brain tumor and lessens exposure to the rest of the brain
- Proton therapy
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly to the brain tumor site, with no damage to nearby healthy tissue. It may be used to treat tumors in very sensitive areas, including in the skull base and along the spine.
Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy
Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LITT) is performed by implanting a laser catheter into the tumor and heating it to temperatures high enough to kill the tumor.
The treatment is minimally invasive, often requiring little more than a 2-millimeter incision in the scalp, and takes just a few minutes to perform. Most patients can go home the day after treatment and can quickly return to normal activities. LITT is currently being used to treat patients with primary and metastatic brain tumors, but can also help patients who do not respond to stereotactic radiosurgery or have radiation necrosis (tissue death caused by radiation treatment).
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy often is not as effective for brain cancer as some other types of cancer. This is because of the blood-brain barrier, small blood vessels in the brain, and spinal cord that protect the brain from harmful substances. They also may act as a shield against chemotherapy drugs.
Targeted Therapies
These new drugs target the specific gene changes that cause cancer.
Breast Cancer
Approximately one in eight women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime. Annual mammograms are recommended for women 40 and older and younger women with specific breast cancer risk factors.
Warning signs and symptoms for breast cancer can vary greatly. If you experience any changes in the breast, nipple, or underarms, schedule an appointment with your doctor.
Causes and Risk Factors
A risk factor is anything that increases the chances of developing a specific disease. Key risk factors and causes include:
- Age: As women age, their breast cancer risk increases. Most breast cancers are diagnosed after age 50. If you believe you may be more likely to develop cancer because of your personal or family medical history.
- Inherited genetic mutations: Specific gene mutations increase the risk of developing cancer. These include the BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations. Normal BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes repair damaged DNA. When these genes are mutated in certain ways, they fail at DNA repair, which could lead to breast and/or ovarian cancer. Other genes mutations associated with a higher risk of cancer include PALB2, another DNA repair gene; CHEK2, a tumor suppressor; and PTEN, which controls how quickly cells multiply.
- Family history: A woman’s odds of developing breast cancer increase if a parent, sibling or child has had the disease.
- Early menstruation: Women who began menstruating before age 12 have a higher risk of developing breast cancer.
- Women who have no full-term pregnancies or their first pregnancy after age 30 at a higher risk of breast cancer.
- Previous breast cancer diagnosis: A woman who has had breast cancer once has a higher risk of developing a second cancer.
- Previous radiation therapy to the chest in childhood or early adulthood increases the risk of developing breast cancer.
- Obesity, particularly after menopause, increases a woman’s breast cancer risk.
- Dense breast tissue based on its appearance in a mammogram is a known risk factor for breast cancer.
What are the symptoms of Breast Cancer?
Breast cancer symptoms vary from person to person and there is no exact definition of what a lump or mass feels like. The best thing to do is to be familiar with your breasts so you know how “normal” feels and looks. If you notice any changes, tell your doctor. However, many breast cancers are found by mammograms before any symptoms appear.
Breast cancer symptoms may include:
- Lump or mass in the breast
- Lump or mass in the armpit
- Skin redness
- Dimpling or puckering on the breast
- Scaliness on nipple (sometimes extending to the areola)
- Discharge from the nipple
- Nipple changes, including the nipple turning inward, pulling to one side or changing direction
- Ulcer on the breast or nipple (sometimes extending to the areola)
- Thickening of the skin, resulting in an orange-peel texture
- Swelling
These symptoms do not always mean you have breast cancer. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may also signal other health problems.
How is Breast Cancer diagnosed?
Diagnostic imaging
Your diagnostic tests may include one or more of the following procedures:
- Mammogram: X-ray images of the breast. At DF/BWCC, we use digital mammograms, which provide a clear two-dimensional image highlighting unusual structures such as calcifications or masses, which may need further evaluation. Three-dimensional imaging is an FDA-approved advanced technology that takes multiple images, or X-rays of breast tissue to create a 3D picture of the breast. You may also hear it called breast tomosynthesis. Unlike a traditional mammogram, which only takes one single image, breast tomosynthesis takes multiple images. These multiple images of breast tissue slices give doctors a clearer image of breast masses and make it easier to detect breast cancer.
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging): Imaging that may show abnormal tissue more clearly than a mammogram. MRIs are used in special situations, often for individuals who have a genetic predisposition to breast cancer, and unclear mammograms.
- Ultrasound: Imaging that can capture the size and structure of a potential tumor. Ultrasound is rarely used for cancer screening because not all cancers are visible on ultrasound. However, in conjunction with mammography, it is a highly useful tool for diagnosis. For example, ultrasound can further characterize an abnormality seen on a mammogram, or help guide the needle during a breast biopsy.
In some cases, more extensive imaging may be necessary to determine whether breast cancer has spread beyond the breast. When this is the case, CT scans and/or bone scans may be used. In select cases, a PET scan may also be necessary.
If a diagnostic imaging test reveals an abnormal finding that cannot be resolved through other imaging techniques, your doctor will likely recommend a biopsy. Biopsy involves the removal of a small sample of tissue through one of several techniques. The choice of technique depends on the location and quality of the tissue to be examined. Radiologists, pathologists, and, in some cases, surgeons, are involved in the biopsy process.
Types of biopsies include:
- Fine needle aspiration: This nearly painless procedure involves the insertion of a very thin needle into the suspicious area of the breast. The clinician uses the needle to “aspirate” fluid and cells to be examined by a pathologist.
- Core needle biopsy: When a slightly larger tissue sample is needed for a definitive diagnosis, a clinician will use a hollow needle to withdraw a thin cylinder from the suspicious area. This type of biopsy requires local anesthesia.
- Image-guided core needle biopsy: In many cases, it may be impossible to locate a suspicious area through touch. In this case, radiologists use ultrasound, stereotactic (mammographic) imaging, or MRI to guide the removal of tissue using a hollow needle. Stereotactic biopsy finds the exact location of a breast lump or suspicious area by using a computer and mammogram images to determine the three-dimensional lesion location within the breast. A sample of tissue is removed with a needle that is guided to the appropriate area using the 3D coordinates. A titanium clip is typically placed at the time of a core needle biopsy to ensure that the area of interest can be identified after biopsy in the event that additional tissue must be removed.
- Surgical biopsy: In relatively few cases, other imaging and biopsy techniques may not provide enough information to either diagnose or rule out breast cancer. When that happens, radiologists and surgeons work together to remove all or part of a suspicious mass. In some cases, if the lump can’t be felt, a wire is inserted to guide your surgeon to the right location. While this type of procedure does require anesthesia, it rarely requires an overnight hospital stay.
Once a biopsy is completed, tissue samples are examined by pathologists who specialize exclusively in breast cancer. Pathologists’ findings are critical to determining the best treatment for your cancer, and, at DF/BWCC, pathologists are key members of your medical team, providing consultation to clinicians and, at times, working side by side with surgeons. Pathologists not only evaluate tissues to characterize your cancer, but they also investigate any unusual or unexpected findings, using microscopes and analysis to observe and test tissue.
Breast cancer surgery
Like all surgeries, breast cancer surgery is most successful when performed by a specialist with a great deal of experience in the particular procedure. At the start of treatment, care teams assess if the patient needs reconstructive surgery. If so, the breast cancer surgeons and reconstructive surgeons work together to plan procedures that minimize incisions and possible scarring. Their goal is to achieve the most effective surgery and the best possible cosmetic outcome and symmetry.
Some patients will receive chemotherapy or targeted therapy before surgery. The goal of these treatments is to shrink the tumor and any involved lymph nodes to make the procedure and recovery as easy as possible for the patient. This also allows the treating team to assess how the cancer has responded to treatment, which can be important for some breast cancer subtypes.
The surgeries themselves fall into one of two categories: lumpectomies and mastectomies. Your surgeon will recommend the best option for you based on the size and location of tumors in the breast, the size of the breast itself, and the need for radiation treatment. In a typical lumpectomy surgery, the tumor and a small amount of surrounding normal tissue is removed. Lumpectomies are generally outpatient procedures and have shorter recovery times. These procedures are usually followed by radiation therapy.
In a typical mastectomy surgery, the tumor and the entire breast are removed. There are a number of different types of mastectomies, including procedures that spare the breast’s skin and nipple/areola. Often a mastectomy and breast reconstruction can be performed in the same procedure.
In some cases, both breasts are removed. This can help prevent the development of a new breast cancer. It is typically done for patients are at high risk for developing breast cancer due to family history or their own genetic profile, such as a BRCA mutation. In both lumpectomies and mastectomies, surgeons may also remove nearby lymph nodes. These are important parts of the lymphatic system, which helps the body fight disease. Breast cancer can spread through nearby lymph nodes. Doctors will study the ones that are removed to determine if there are cancer cells within the nodes. This information can help determine the risk of the disease spreading to distant organs, as well as the need for chemotherapy and radiation therapy.
Breast cancer radiation therapy
Radiation therapy uses powerful beams of energy carefully designed to kill breast cancer cells.
At most hospitals, the radiation oncologist developing these treatments is work on several different types of cancer.For breast cancer patients, radiation therapy can be used before surgery to shrink large tumors or after surgery in order to kill any remaining breast cancer cells that can’t be seen by the naked eye. It can also be used as a palliative treatment to reduce symptoms caused by cancer spreading to other parts of the body and improve the patient’s quality of life.
Radiation can be given to the breast tissue surrounding the area where the tumor was located, as well as to nearby lymph nodes and the chest wall. After a lumpectomy, patients often receive three to four weeks of daily radiation therapy. In some cases one to two weeks may be appropriate. When the lymph nodes are involved or a mastectomy was needed, patients usually need six weeks of daily radiation therapy.
Radiation therapy treatments for breast cancer patients include:
- 3D conformal radiation therapy: This technique uses radiation beams that are shaped to the tumor’s dimension. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy: IMRT uses multiple beams of radiation with different intensities to deliver a precise, high dose of radiation to the tumor.
- Intensity modulated radiation therapy: IMRT uses multiple beams of radiation with different intensities to deliver a precis, high dose of radiation to the tumor.
- Volumetric arc therapy: A type of IMRT, in VMAT therapy, the section of the machine that shoots out the beam of radiation rotates around the patient in an arc. This can irradiate the tumor more precisely and shorten procedure times.
- Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation: A form of brachytherapy, APBI uses radioactive pellets or seeds to kill cancer cells that may remain after a lumpectomy.
- Stereotactic body radiation surgery: SBRT administers very high doses of radiation, using several beams of various intensities aimed at different angles to precisely target the tumor.
- Stereotactic radiosurgery: Stereotactic radiosurgery most commonly used to treat breast cancer that has spread to the brain.
- Stereotactic radiosurgery uses dozens of tiny radiation beams to target tumors with a precise, high dose of radiation. Read more about stereotactic radiosurgery
Breast cancer proton therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. For many patients, this results in better cancer control with fewer side effects.
Breast cancer targeted therapy
Cancer cells rely on specific molecules (often in the form of proteins) to survive, multiply and spread. Targeted therapies stop or slow the growth of cancer by interfering with, or targeting, these molecules or the genes that produce them. In recent years, targeted therapy has become a major weapon in the fight against breast cancer. Breast cancer subtypes that once had poor prognoses are now highly treatable.
One type of targeted therapy is endocrine therapy, which is given to patients with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. This can be given before surgery to shrink the tumor. It is also given after surgery for five to 10 years to prevent recurrence. Patients with the metastatic form of this disease are also given endocrine therapy in order to prevent disease progression. Patients with HER2-positive breast cancer also receive targeted therapies. These patients may receive a different set of targeted therapy drugs both prior to and after surgery. Since about half of patients with HER2-positive breast cancer also have hormone receptor-positive tumors, they are also given endocrine therapy. While there are no targeted therapies for triple negative breast cancer, researchers are studying the disease to identify possible drug targets.
Breast cancer chemotherapy
Chemotherapy uses powerful drugs to directly kill cancer cells, control their growth or relieve pain. It is often given to patients prior to surgery to shrink the tumor and simplify the procedure. Breast cancer patients can receive chemotherapy either orally or intravenously.
Cervical Cancer
Cervical cancer is a disease in which malignant (cancer) cells form in the cervix. The cervix is the lower, narrow end of the uterus (the hollow, pear-shaped organ where a fetus grows). It leads from the uterus to the vagina (birth canal) and holds the fetus in place during pregnancy. Cervical cancer usually develops slowly over time and is pre-dated by pre-cancerous changes, which is why PAP tests are so successful in preventing cervical cancer from developing or detecting it at an early stage.
Before cancer appears in the cervix, the cells of the cervix go through changes known as dysplasia, in which cells that are not normal begin to appear in the cervical tissue. Later, cancer cells start to grow and spread more deeply into the cervix and surrounding areas, such as lymph nodes.
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for cervical cancer can include:
- Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection with certain high-risk subtypes
- Smoking cigarettes
- Many sexual partners
- First sexual intercourse at a young age
- Weakened immune system, such as for those with AIDS
What are the symptoms of Cervical Cancer?
In its earliest stages, cervical cancer usually does not have symptoms. This is why regular Pap tests are so important, particularly if you are sexually active.
When cervical cancer does have symptoms, they vary from person to person.
Some symptoms of cervical cancer include:
- Vaginal discharge tinged with blood
- Vaginal bleeding after sexual intercourse
- Abnormal vaginal bleeding: after menopause, between menstrual periods or excessively heavy periods
- Urinating more often
- Pain during sex
- Swollen leg
- History of untreated dysplasia (precancerous cell changes) of the cervix
These symptoms do not always mean you have cervical cancer. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Cervical Cancer diagnosed?
Cervical Cancer Diagnostic Tests
If you have symptoms or Pap test results that suggest precancerous cells or cervical cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health; your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits; and your family medical history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have cervical cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Colposcopy: This test uses an instrument called a colposcope to look more closely at an area of abnormal tissue on the cervix, vagina or vulva. A colposcope is a microscope designed to examine the cervix. It looks like a pair of binoculars on a stand.
Biopsy: In a biopsy to look for cervical cancer, the doctor removes a small amount of tissue from the cervix to look at under a microscope. Types of cervical biopsies include:
Punch biopsy: The tissue sample is removed from the cervix using biopsy forceps, an instrument used to grasp tissue firmly and remove it.
Endocervical curettage (ECC): A tissue sample is scraped from an area just past the opening of the cervix using a curette (small, spoon-shaped instrument) or a thin, soft brush.
LEEP (Loop electro-surgical excision procedure): This test uses a small wire that is heated with low-voltage, high-frequency radio waves to remove cells from the cervix.
Cone biopsy: A cone-shaped sample of tissue is removed so the pathologist can see if abnormal cells are in the tissue beneath the surface of the cervix. The amount of tissue removed is larger than that removed with other types of biopsy. This type of biopsy can be done by one of the following methods:
- LEEP cone biopsy: The LEEP device is used, and the biopsy can be done in the doctor’s office under local anesthesia.
- Knife cone biopsy: A scalpel (small sharp knife) is used in an operating room with local or general anesthesia.
- Laser: A carbon dioxide laser is used to remove tissue.
Cystoscopy or proctoscopy: If you are diagnosed with cervical cancer and your doctor thinks it may have spread, you may have a cytoscopy or proctoscopy or both. These tests use lighted tubes to view the inside of the bladder (cystoscopy) or the anus, rectum and lower colon (proctoscopy).
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
- Chest X-ray
Laparoscopic retroperitoneal lymph node dissection: In this minimally invasive surgical procedure, lymph nodes are removed to help find if cancer has spread.
Treatment options depend on:
- The stage of the cancer
- The size of the tumor
- The patient’s desire to have children
- The patient’s age
Treatment during pregnancy depends on the stage of the cancer and the stage of the pregnancy. For cervical cancer that is found early, or for cancer found during the last trimester of pregnancy, treatment may be delayed until after the baby is born.
Colon Cancer
The colon is part of the digestive system, also called the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.
- The colon is the first six feet of the large intestine, also called the large bowel
- The rectum is the last six inches of the large intestine, which ends in the anus
Colorectal cancers grow slowly. They usually start as polyps, which are overgrowths of tissue in the colon’s lining. Colon cancer may start within a polyp, but not all polyps contain cancer.
Colon cancer survival rates have increased over the past 15 years. Because of screening, polyps often are found and removed before they become cancer. Also, treatments have become more advanced and less invasive.
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting colon cancer is a risk factor. Colon cancer risk factors include:
- Family history of colon cancer, rectal cancer or polyps
- Hereditary cancer syndromes such as hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC or Lynch) syndrome or familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease or chronic ulcerative colitis)
- Colorectal cancer or polyps
- Obesity
- Lack of exercise
- Diet: If you eat a lot of red meat, processed meats or meats cooked at very high heat, you may be at higher risk for colon cancer
- Diabetes Type 2
- Cigarette smoking
- Drinking too much alcohol
What are the symptoms of Colon Cancer?
Colon cancer often does not have symptoms in the early stages. Most colon cancers begin as polyps, small non-cancerous growths on the colon wall that can grow larger and become cancerous. As polyps or cancers grow, they can bleed or block the intestines.
Symptoms of colon cancer may include:
- Rectal bleeding
- Blood in the stool or toilet after a bowel movement
- Diarrhea or constipation that does not go away
- A change in the size or shape of the stool
- Discomfort or urge to have a bowel movement when there is no need
- Abdominal pain or a cramping pain in your lower stomach
- Bloating or full feeling
- Change in appetite
- Weight loss without dieting
- Fatigue
These symptoms usually do not mean you have colon cancer. But if you notice one or more of them for more than two weeks, see your doctor.
How is Colon Cancer diagnosed?
The following tests may be used to diagnose colon cancer or find out if it has spread. Tests also may be used to find out if surrounding tissues or organs have been damaged by treatment.
Digital rectal exam (DRE): The doctor inserts a gloved finger into the rectum to feel for polyps or other problems.
Fecal occult blood test (FOBT): This take-home test finds blood in stool.
Fecal immunochemical test (FIT): This take-home test finds blood proteins in stool.
Endoscopic tests, which may include:
- Sigmoidoscopy: A tiny camera on flexible plastic tubing (sigmoidoscope) is inserted into the rectum. This gives the doctor a view of the rectum and lower colon. Tissue or polyps can be removed and looked at under a microscope.
- Colonoscopy: A longer version of a sigmoidoscope, a colonoscopy can look at the entire colon.
Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS): An endoscope is inserted into the rectum. A probe at the end bounces high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) off internal organs to make a picture (sonogram). Also called endosonography.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scan
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scan
- PET/CT (positron emission tomography) scan
- Virtual colonoscopy or CT (computed tomography) colonoscopy
- Double-contrast barium enema (DCBE): Barium is a chemical that allows the bowel lining to show up on an X-ray. A barium solution is given by enema, and then a series of X-rays are taken.
Blood test for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA): CEA is a protein, or tumor marker, made by some cancerous tumors. This test also can be used to find out if the tumor is growing or has come back after treatment.
Surgery
Surgery is the most common treatment for colon cancer, especially if it has not spread. As for many cancers, surgery for colon cancer is most successful when done by a surgeon with a great deal of experience in the procedure.
Colon cancer may be treated with surgery alone, surgery and chemotherapy, and/or other treatments. Chemotherapy or radiation may be given:
- Before surgery to make the cancer smaller. This is called neoadjuvant therapy.
- After surgery to help keep you cancer-free. This is called adjuvant therapy.
The type of surgery depends on the stage and location of the tumor:
Polypectomy: A colonoscopy, which is a long tube with a camera on the end, is inserted into the rectum and guided to the polyp. A tiny, scissor-like tool or wire loop removes the polyp.
Colectomy: The area of the colon where the cancer is, along with some healthy surrounding tissue, is removed. The associated lymph nodes are removed (biopsied) and looked at under a microscope. Usually, the surgeon then rejoins the parts of the colon. This surgery also is called a hemicolectomy or partial colectomy.
Your doctor will decide whether it is best to perform traditional open surgery or minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery.
With minimally invasive surgery, small cuts are made in the abdomen. A tiny camera and surgical instruments are inserted. The surgeon then uses video imaging to perform the surgery. Endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR) may be used if the cancer is small and only on the surface of the colon. A needle is placed in the colon wall, and then saline (saltwater) is injected to make a bubble under the growth. Using suction, the lesion is removed.
Endoluminal stent placement: This minimally invasive procedure uses an endoscope to place expanding metal stents to help relieve a bowel obstruction.
Chemotherapy
New up-to-date and effective chemotherapy options are now available for colon cancer. Drugs are given by mouth (pills) or intravenously (injected into a vein).
- Chemotherapy may be used to help
- Shrink the cancer before surgery
- Keep you cancer-free after surgery
- Prolong life when surgery is not an option
Targeted Therapies
New targeted therapies are available for certain types of colon cancer. These innovative new drugs stop the growth of cancer cells by interfering with certain proteins and receptors or blood vessels that supply the tumor with what it needs to grow, survive, and spread.
Radiation Therapy
The most advanced radiation treatments, including:
- Brachytherapy: Tiny radioactive seeds are placed in the body close to the tumor
- 3D-conformal radiation therapy: Several radiation beams are given in the exact shape of the tumor
- Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT): Treatment is tailored to the specific shape of the tumor to reduce damage to normal tissue.
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers the highest radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. This results in better cancer control for many patients with fewer side effects.
Endometrial Cancer
Endometrial cancer is a disease in which malignant (cancer) cells form in the endometrium. The endometrium is the lining of the uterus, an organ in a woman’s pelvis where a fetus grows. The uterus consists of three layers:
- The endometrium, which is shed during a menstrual cycle
- The myometrium which is the muscle layer
- The serosa, which is the outside layer or covering of the uterus
Endometrial cancer is a different type of cancer than cancer that occurs in the muscle layer of the uterus, which is called a sarcoma or “leiomyosarcoma.”
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for endometrial cancer can include:
- Taking estrogen alone (without progesterone)
- Being overweight/obese
- Diabetes mellitus
- High blood pressure
- Taking tamoxifen for breast cancer or breast cancer prevention
- Family history of certain cancers or Lynch syndrome, an inherited condition that increases the risk of developing certain cancers (most commonly colon cancer, endometrial cancer, and ovarian cancer)
What are the symptoms of Endometrial Cancer?
Signs and symptoms of endometrial cancer can include:
- Bleeding, spotting, or discharge not related to menstruation (periods)
- Bleeding, spotting, or discharge in a post-menopausal woman should prompt medical evaluation
- Difficult or painful urination
- Pelvic pain
- Pain during sexual intercourse
How is Endometrial Cancer diagnosed?
- Endometrial biopsy
- Dilatation and curettage (D&C)
- Transvaginal ultrasound
Treatment options include::
- Surgery
- Radiation therapy
- Hormonal therapy
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy, used to treat cancer, is a special high-energy X-ray that is more powerful than the X-rays used for imaging studies. Radiation therapy is planned and
executed in a way to kill cancer cells or alter their ability to reproduce, while the surrounding healthy cells are minimally affected.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy uses chemical agents to interfere with replication and other normal functions of cells, resulting in tumor shrinkage or cancer cell death. The use of two or more chemotherapy drugs together is more effective than a single drug alone. There are several types of chemotherapy.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy is a cancer treatment approach that uses drugs and vaccines to harness the immune system’s natural ability to fight cancer, in the same way it fights off infections. The approach is still being researched and there is a lot left to learn, but clinical studies have shown that immunotherapy holds a lot of promise in its ability to treat a wide range of malignancies, including some types of Endometrial cancer.
There are a few FDA-approved immunotherapy drugs available for treating advanced and metastatic Endometrial cancer that have worsened after chemotherapy. Scientists are also investigating the possibility that combinations of immunotherapy drugs could be more effective than individual drugs.
Esophageal Cancer
Esophageal cancer forms in tissues that line the esophagus, which is the hollow, muscular tube that moves food and liquid from the throat down into the stomach. Esophageal cancer starts at the inside lining of the esophagus and spreads through the outer layers as it grows.
Esophageal cancer is relatively uncommon, and it affects many more men than women. It is a challenging condition to treat since patients usually aren’t diagnosed until the cancer has advanced to the point where it causes symptoms. About 60 percent of esophageal cancer patients are diagnosed with metastatic cancer, meaning that it has spread to other organs and distant lymph nodes.
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting esophageal cancer is a risk factor. Long-term heartburn or reflux is a factor in half of esophageal cancers. Other esophageal cancer causes and risks include:
- Long-term history of smoking: Half of squamous cell esophageal cancers involve smoking. Smoking also increases the risk of adenocarcinoma.
- Drinking too much alcohol, especially if you smoke
- Barrett’s esophagus, a condition in which chronic acid reflux causes changes in the cells lining the lower esophagus
- Age: Most cases of esophageal cancer are in people over 55.
- Gender: Men are three times more likely than women to develop esophageal cancer.
- Achalasia, a disease in which the sphincter, or muscle, at the bottom of the esophagus fails to open and move food into the stomach
- Tylosis, a rare, inherited disorder that causes excess skin to grow on the soles of the feet and palms. It has a near 100% chance of developing into esophageal cancer.
- Esophageal webs: These flaps of tissue protruding into the esophagus, making swallowing difficult
- Lye ingestion or being around dry-cleaning chemicals
- Diet and weight: Risk is higher if you are overweight, tend to overeat or do not eat a healthy diet
- History of other squamous cell cancers related to tobacco use
Not everyone with risk factors gets esophageal cancer. However, if you have risk factors, you should discuss them with your doctor.
What are the symptoms of Esophageal Cancer?
Signs of esophageal cancer are often not apparent in its early stages. If you have symptoms, they may include:
- Indigestion and heartburn
- Difficult or painful swallowing (dysphagia)
- Pain, pressure, or burning in the throat or chest
- Weight loss, less appetite
- Black tar-like stools
- Anemia
- Vomiting
- Hoarseness
- Persistent hiccups
- Chronic cough
- Pneumonia
- High levels of calcium in the blood
These symptoms do not always mean you have esophageal cancer. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Esophageal Cancer diagnosed?
Esophageal Cancer Diagnostic Tests
If you have symptoms that may signal esophageal cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health; your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits; and your family medical history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have esophageal cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- X-rays
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
Biopsy
One of the following methods may be used to biopsy tissue to find out if you have esophageal cancer:
- Esophagoscopy: An endoscope is inserted through the mouth or nose into the esophagus. The doctor looks at the esophagus and removes small pieces of tissue.
- Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) or endo sonography: An endoscope is inserted through an opening in the body, usually the mouth or rectum. At the end of the tube are a light, a tiny camera, and a device that sends out ultrasound (high-energy sound) waves to make images of internal organs.
- Video endoscopy: An endoscope with a special fiber-optic camera is inserted through the mouth, allowing the doctor to view the esophagus and biopsy the suspicious area.
- Bronchoscopy: Using a tool called a bronchoscope, which is similar to the endoscope, the doctor looks at the trachea (windpipe) and the tubes that go into the lungs.
- Laryngoscopy: With a tool called a laryngoscope, which is similar to the endoscope, the doctor examines the larynx (voice box).
- Thoracoscopy: A small incision is made between two ribs, and an instrument called a thoracoscope is inserted through it into the chest. The thoracoscope is similar to the endoscope. It lets the doctor view and biopsy the lymph nodes inside the abdomen and chest.
Studies have shown that people have better outcomes in cancer programs that treat a high level of patients. We have one of the most active esophageal cancer programs in the nation.
We offer many innovative treatments for esophageal cancer, including minimally invasive surgeries, photodynamic therapy, targeted therapies, and endoscopic surgery for early-stage disease. In addition, our status as a major research site allows us to offer a full range of clinical trials for esophageal cancer.
If you are diagnosed with esophageal cancer, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the type and stage of the cancer and your general health. Your treatment for esophageal cancer will be customized to your particular needs. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms. Treatment options include:
Surgery
This is the most common treatment for esophageal cancer that has not spread to the lymph nodes. The procedure most often performed is an esophagectomy, and there are several methods to perform it. Your doctor will recommend the best technique for you based on the location of the tumor and if it has spread.
Generally, the surgery includes the removal of:
- All or part of the esophagus
- Part of the stomach
- Lymph nodes that are close to the esophagus
The remaining stomach is pulled up into the chest or neck and connected to the remaining esophagus. You may need a feeding tube (a small tube that is inserted into the nose or mouth and the stomach) until you can eat.
Radiation Therapy
New radiation therapy techniques and remarkable skills allow doctors to target tumors more precisely, delivering the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells.
The most advanced radiation treatments for esophageal cancer includes:
- Brachytherapy: Tiny radioactive seeds are placed in the body close to the tumor
- 3D-conformal radiation therapy: Several radiation beams are given in the exact shape of the tumor
- Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT): Treatment is tailored to the specific shape of the tumor
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly to the tumor site, with no damage to nearby healthy tissue. For some patients, this therapy results in better cancer control with fewer side effects.
Chemotherapy
New and most up-to-date and advanced chemotherapy options for esophageal cancer are now available.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT)
Laser-sensitive chemicals are injected into the esophageal cancer site. A laser beam then targets the chemicals to destroy the tumor. It may also be used to treat Barrett’s esophagus or to help if a tumor is blocking the esophagus but cannot be treated with other methods.
Endoscopic mucosal resection (EMR)
This minimally invasive technique may be used if the cancer is small and only on the surface of the esophagus. A needle is placed in the esophageal wall, and then saline (saltwater) is injected to make a bubble under the growth. Using suction, the lesion is removed.
Esophageal stents
Small, expandable metal or plastic tubes are placed over the tumor with the aid of an endoscope. Once placed, the stent can expand and open up the blocked part of the esophagus, allowing food and liquids to pass through easier.
Electrocoagulation
Electricity is used to burn off the tumor.
Targeted therapies
These innovative drugs stop the growth of esophageal cancer cells by interfering with certain proteins and receptors or blood vessels that allow the tumor to grow.
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Hodgkin’s lymphoma — formerly known as Hodgkin’s disease — is a cancer of the lymphatic system, part of your immune system. It may affect people of any age but is most common in people between 20 and 40 years old and those over 55.
In Hodgkin’s lymphoma, cells in the lymphatic system grow abnormally and may spread beyond it.
Hodgkin’s lymphoma is one of two common types of lymphatic system cancers. The other type, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, is far more common.
Advances in diagnosis and treatment of Hodgkin’s lymphoma have helped give people with this disease the chance for a full recovery. The prognosis continues to improve for people with Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
Types of Hodgkin’s lymphoma
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
- Cutaneous B-cell lymphoma
- Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma
- Lymphoma
Causes and Risk Factors
Factors that can increase the risk of Hodgkin’s lymphoma include:
- Your age. Hodgkin’s lymphoma is most often diagnosed in people between 15 and 30 years old and those over 55.
- A family history of lymphoma. Having a blood relative with Hodgkin’s lymphoma or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma increases your risk of developing Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
- Being male. Males are slightly more likely to develop Hodgkin’s lymphoma than are females.
- Past Epstein-Barr infection. People who have had illnesses caused by the Epstein-Barr virus, such as infectious mononucleosis, are more likely to develop Hodgkin’s lymphoma than are people who haven’t had Epstein-Barr infections.
What are the symptoms of Hodgkin’s lymphoma?
Signs and symptoms of Hodgkin’s lymphoma may include:
- Painless swelling of lymph nodes in your neck, armpits, or groin
- Persistent fatigue
- Fever
- Night sweats
- Unexplained weight loss
- Severe itching
- Increased sensitivity to the effects of alcohol or pain in your lymph nodes after drinking alcohol
How is Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosed?
Your doctor will ask you about your personal and family medical history. He or she may then have you undergo tests and procedures used to diagnose Hodgkin’s lymphoma, including:
- A physical exam. Your doctor checks for swollen lymph nodes, including in your neck, underarm, and groin, as well as a swollen spleen or liver.
- Blood tests. A sample of your blood is examined in a lab to see if anything in your blood indicates the possibility of cancer.
- Imaging tests. Your doctor may recommend imaging tests to look for signs of Hodgkin’s lymphoma in other areas of your body. Tests may include X-ray, CT and positron emission tomography.
- Removing a lymph node for testing. Your doctor may recommend a lymph node biopsy procedure to remove a lymph node for laboratory testing. He or she will diagnose classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma if abnormal cells called Reed-Sternberg cells are found within the lymph node.
- Removing a sample of bone marrow for testing. A bone marrow biopsy and aspiration procedure involves inserting a needle into your hipbone to remove a sample of bone marrow. The sample is analyzed to look for Hodgkin’s lymphoma cells.
Your doctor will review your scans and discuss treatment options with you.
Which Hodgkin’s lymphoma treatments are right for you depends on the type and stage of your disease, your overall health, and your preferences. The goal of treatment is to destroy as many cancer cells as possible and bring the disease into remission.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a drug treatment that uses chemicals to kill lymphoma cells. Chemotherapy drugs travel through your bloodstream and can reach nearly all areas of your body.
Chemotherapy is often combined with radiation therapy in people with early-stage classical-type Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Radiation therapy is typically done after chemotherapy. In advanced Hodgkin’s lymphoma, chemotherapy may be used alone or combined with radiation therapy.
Chemotherapy drugs can be taken in pill form or through a vein in your arm, or sometimes both methods of administration are used. Several combinations of chemotherapy drugs are used to treat Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
Side effects of chemotherapy depend on the drugs you’re given. Common side effects are nausea and hair loss. Serious long-term complications can occur, such as heart damage, lung damage, fertility problems, and other cancers, such as leukemia.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy uses high-energy beams, such as X-rays and protons, to kill cancer cells. For classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma, radiation therapy is often used after chemotherapy. People with early-stage nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin’s lymphoma may undergo radiation therapy alone.
During radiation therapy, you lie on a table and a large machine moves around you, directing the energy beams to specific points on your body. Radiation can be aimed at affected lymph nodes and the nearby area of nodes where the disease might progress. The length of radiation treatment varies, depending on the stage of the disease. A typical treatment plan might have you going to the hospital or clinic five days a week for several weeks. At each visit, you undergo a 30-minute radiation treatment.
Radiation therapy can cause skin redness and hair loss at the site where the radiation is aimed. Many people experience fatigue during radiation therapy. More serious risks include heart disease, stroke, thyroid problems, infertility, and other cancers, such as breast or lung cancer.
Bone marrow transplant
Bone marrow transplant, also known as stem cell transplant, is a treatment to replace your diseased bone marrow with healthy stem cells that help you grow new bone marrow. A bone marrow transplant may be an option if Hodgkin’s lymphoma returns despite treatment.
During a bone marrow transplant, your blood stem cells are removed, frozen and stored for later use. Next, you receive high-dose chemotherapy and radiation therapy to destroy cancerous cells in your body. Finally, your stem cells are thawed and injected into your body through your veins. The stem cells help build healthy bone marrow.
People who undergo bone marrow transplants may be at increased risk of infection.
Other drug therapy
Other drugs used to treat Hodgkin’s lymphoma include targeted drugs that focus on specific vulnerabilities in your cancer cells and immunotherapy that works to activate your own immune system to kill the lymphoma cells. If other treatments haven’t helped or if your Hodgkin’s lymphoma returns, your lymphoma cells may be analyzed in a laboratory to look for genetic mutations. Your doctor may recommend treatment with a drug that targets the particular mutations present in your lymphoma cells.
Targeted therapy is an active area of cancer research. New targeted therapy drugs are being studied in clinical trials.
Kidney Cancer
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting kidney cancer is called a risk factor. The biggest risk for kidney cancer is smoking.
Other kidney cancer risk factors include:
- Age: Most cases occur after age 50
- Gender: Men are more than twice as likely to get kidney cancer as women
- Obesity
- High blood pressure
- Exposure to asbestos, cadmium, and coke (used in making steel), benzene, herbicides and organic solvents
- Advanced kidney disease and long-term kidney dialysis
- Race: African Americans have a slightly higher rate of kidney cancer
- Rare inherited conditions including von Hippel-Lindau disease or hereditary papillary renal cell carcinoma
- Family history of kidney disease
What are the symptoms of Kidney Cancer?
Due to the location of the kidneys, many kidney cancer symptoms don’t show until the tumor has grown quite large. If there are symptoms, they vary from person to person.
The most common kidney cancer symptom is blood in the urine (hematuria), but a variety of conditions can cause hematuria so it doesn’t necessarily mean you have cancer.
Other kidney cancer symptoms may include:
- A lump or mass on the side or lower back
- Unexplained fever for a few weeks
- Rapid weight loss
- Lingering dull ache or pain in the side, abdomen or lower back
- Feeling tired or in poor health
- Swelling of ankles and legs
These symptoms do not always mean you have kidney cancer and may be caused by other conditions. However, discussing any symptoms with your doctor is important, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Kidney Cancer diagnosed?
If you have symptoms that may signal kidney cancer, your doctor will ask you questions about your health; your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits; and your family medical history.
One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have kidney cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working
Blood and urine tests
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- Ultrasound
- Chest X-Ray
- Bone Scan
Biopsy and fine needle aspiration (FNA) are sometimes used to obtain a biopsy of the kidney. This involves the insertion of a long, thin needle into the kidney to take a tiny sample of tissue for examination under a microscope. With modern biopsy methods, there is virtually no risk of ‘spreading cancer’.
If you are diagnosed with kidney cancer, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including the stage of the cancer and your general health. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Surgery
Tumors that are confined to the kidney or the area around the kidney usually are surgically removed. The surgeon needs to leave as much of the kidney as possible. When your surgeon has a high level of experience in this type of surgery, your outcomes are likely to be better.
You can usually live with one kidney, but if both kidneys are removed or not working you will need kidney dialysis (a way to clean the blood with a machine). A kidney transplant may be an option for some patients.
The main types of surgery for kidney cancer include:
Radical nephrectomy is the removal of the entire kidney along with the surrounding fatty tissue. Sometimes the adrenal gland and nearby lymph nodes are removed too. One of the following methods will be used, depending on the size of the tumor and other factors that your surgeon will consider.
Standard or “open” surgery: A four- to eight-inch incision (cut) is made in the front of the abdomen. The surgeon removes the entire kidney through the incision.
Laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (LRN): A small incision is made to insert a laparoscope. Other tiny incisions are made for miniature surgical instruments to remove the kidney. Benefits of this procedure include a shorter hospital stay (one to two days vs. five to seven days), shorter recovery time, and less blood loss than with open surgery. Surgeon experience is important for this procedure.
Partial nephrectomy (or kidney-sparing surgery): Only the cancerous portion of the kidney is removed, along with a margin of healthy tissue around it. High-quality pre-treatment imaging is used to determine what will be removed, and ultrasound can be used to look for additional tumors during surgery.
Candidates for partial nephrectomy are chosen based on favorable tumor location, co-existing health problems that may affect the treatment outcome, the condition of the kidneys, and the patient’s desire to save the kidney. Partial nephrectomy is best for kidney cancer tumors that are 4 centimeters or less in size. They can be done for larger tumors when necessary. Recurrence rates for stage 1 cancers removed by either radical or partial nephrectomy are about 5%.
Partial nephrectomy can be done by traditional or laparoscopic robotic methods. Robotic partial nephrectomy (RPN) offers a shorter hospital stay (one to two days instead of four to five days) and quicker recovery.
Energy ablative techniques
Other minimally invasive surgery techniques use either heat or cold to treat tumors in place, without having to remove the kidney. RFA and cryoablation are ideal for smaller kidney tumors in patients considered at high risk for surgery.
Cryoablation freezes the tumor to -140 degrees Centigrade with a long, thin probe inserted into the tumor. Intensive follow-up with X-rays or other imaging procedures is required to ensure that the tumor has been destroyed.
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is similar to cryoablation, but heat is used to destroy the tumor instead of cold.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy has a limited role in the treatment of kidney cancer. Kidney tumors are not very sensitive to radiation, but healthy kidneys are, so radiation as a frontline treatment is not advisable. In some cases, radiation may be used to help relieve pain and other symptoms when kidney cancer has spread to the bone, brain, or other parts of the body.
Angiogenesis inhibitors
Kidney tumors are very vascular, meaning they have a large number of blood vessels. The tumors use a process called angiogenesis to create their network of blood vessels, enabling the cancer to thrive and grow.
These blood vessels are vulnerable to anti-angiogenic drugs, which are developed to take advantage of this process. This new generation of drugs targets the blood vessels leading to the tumor without harming normal blood vessels.
Several agents have been developed, including Sutent® (sunitinib), Nexavar® (sorafenib), Votrient® (pazopanib), and Avastin® (bevacizumab). Another drug, Torisel® (temsirolimus), has shown promise in patients with more aggressive kidney disease.
Chemotherapy
Most traditional chemotherapy is generally ineffective against kidney tumors, with a few exceptions. A combination of gemcitabine and capecitabine is sometimes used to treat metastatic renal cell cancer.
Leukemia
Leukemia is cancer of the body’s blood-forming tissues, including the bone marrow and the lymphatic system.
Many types of leukemia exist. Some forms of leukemia are more common in children. Other forms of leukemia occur mostly in adults.
Leukemia usually involves the white blood cells. Your white blood cells are potent infection fighters — they normally grow and divide in an orderly way, as your body needs them. But in people with leukemia, the bone marrow produces abnormal white blood cells, which don’t function properly.
Types of leukemia
The major types of leukemia are:
- Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). This is the most common type of leukemia in young children. ALL can also occur in adults.
- Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). AML is a common type of leukemia. It occurs in children and adults. AML is the most common type of acute leukemia in adults.
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). With CLL, the most common chronic adult leukemia, you may feel well for years without needing treatment.
- Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). This type of leukemia mainly affects adults. A person with CML may have few or no symptoms for months or years before entering a phase in which the leukemia cells grow more quickly.
- Other types. Other, rarer types of leukemia exist, including hairy cell leukemia, myelodysplastic syndromes and myeloproliferative disorders.
Leukemia
Leukemia is a cancer of the body’s blood-forming tissues, including the bone marrow and the lymphatic system.
Many types of leukemia exist. Some forms of leukemia are more common in children. Other forms of leukemia occur mostly in adults.
Leukemia usually involves the white blood cells. Your white blood cells are potent infection fighters — they normally grow and divide in an orderly way, as your body needs them. But in people with leukemia, the bone marrow produces abnormal white blood cells, which don’t function properly.
Types of leukemia
The major types of leukemia are:
- Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL). This is the most common type of leukemia in young children. ALL can also occur in adults.
- Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). AML is a common type of leukemia. It occurs in children and adults. AML is the most common type of acute leukemia in adults.
- Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). With CLL, the most common chronic adult leukemia, you may feel well for years without needing treatment.
- Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). This type of leukemia mainly affects adults. A person with CML may have few or no symptoms for months or years before entering a phase in which the leukemia cells grow more quickly.
- Other types. Other, rarer types of leukemia exist, including hairy cell leukemia, myelodysplastic syndromes and myeloproliferative disorders.
Causes and Risk Factor
Factors that may increase your risk of developing some types of leukemia include:
- Previous cancer treatment. People who’ve had certain types of chemotherapy and radiation therapy for other cancers have an increased risk of developing certain types of leukemia.
- Genetic disorders. Genetic abnormalities seem to play a role in the development of leukemia. Certain genetic disorders, such as Down syndrome, are associated with an increased risk of leukemia.
- Exposure to certain chemicals. Exposure to certain chemicals, such as benzene — which is found in gasoline and is used by the chemical industry — is linked to an increased risk of some kinds of leukemia.
- Smoking. Smoking cigarettes increases the risk of acute myelogenous leukemia.
- Family history of leukemia. If members of your family have been diagnosed with leukemia, your risk of the disease may be increased.
What are the symptoms of Leukemia?
Leukemia symptoms vary, depending on the type of leukemia. Common leukemia signs and symptoms include:
- Fever or chills
- Persistent fatigue, weakness
- Frequent or severe infections
- Losing weight without trying
- Swollen lymph nodes, enlarged liver or spleen
- Easy bleeding or bruising
- Recurrent nosebleeds
- Tiny red spots in your skin (petechiae)
- Excessive sweating, especially at night
- Bone pain or tenderness
How is Leukemia diagnosed?
Doctors may find chronic leukemia in a routine blood test, before symptoms begin. If this happens, or if you have signs or symptoms that suggest leukemia, you may undergo the following diagnostic exams:
- Physical exam. Your doctor will look for physical signs of leukemia, such as pale skin from anemia, swelling of your lymph nodes, and enlargement of your liver and spleen.
- Blood tests. By looking at a sample of your blood, your doctor can determine if you have abnormal levels of red or white blood cells or platelets — which may suggest leukemia.
- Bone marrow test. Your doctor may recommend a procedure to remove a sample of bone marrow from your hipbone. The bone marrow is removed using a long, thin needle. The sample is sent to a laboratory to look for leukemia cells. Specialized tests of your leukemia cells may reveal certain characteristics that are used to determine your treatment options.
Treatment for your leukemia depends on many factors. Your doctor determines your leukemia treatment options based on your age and overall health, the type of leukemia you have, and whether it has spread to other parts of your body, including the central nervous system.
Common treatments used to fight leukemia include:
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy is the major form of treatment for leukemia. This drug treatment uses chemicals to kill leukemia cells. Depending on the type of leukemia you have, you may receive a single drug or a combination of drugs. These drugs may come in a pill form, or they may be injected directly into a vein.
- Biological therapy. Biological therapy works by using treatments that help your immune system recognize and attack leukemia cells.
- Targeted therapy. Targeted therapy uses drugs that attack specific vulnerabilities within your cancer cells. For example, the drug imatinib (Gleevec) stops the action of a protein within the leukemia cells of people with chronic myelogenous leukemia. This can help control the disease.
- Radiation therapy. Radiation therapy uses X-rays or other high-energy beams to damage leukemia cells and stop their growth. During radiation therapy, you lie on a table while a large machine moves around you, directing the radiation to precise points on your body. You may receive radiation in one specific area of your body where there is a collection of leukemia cells, or you may receive radiation over your whole body. Radiation therapy may be used to prepare for a stem cell transplant.
- Stem cell transplant. A stem cell transplant is a procedure to replace your diseased bone marrow with healthy bone marrow. Before a stem cell transplant, you receive high doses of chemotherapy or radiation therapy to destroy your diseased bone marrow. Then you receive an infusion of blood-forming stem cells that help to rebuild your bone marrow. You may receive stem cells from a donor, or in some cases you may be able to use your own stem cells. A stem cell transplant is very similar to a bone marrow transplant.
Liver Cancer
Liver cancer can begin in the liver or other parts of the body. Primary liver cancer begins in the liver. Metastatic liver cancer starts somewhere else in the body and metastasizes (spreads) to the liver.
The liver is a common place where cancer spreads. Its large size and high blood flow make it a prime target for tumor cells moving through the bloodstream. Colorectal, breast, and lung cancers are the most common sources of metastatic liver cancer.
The information here focuses on primary liver cancer. The main types of primary liver cancer are:
- Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): Most primary liver cancers are HCC. They begin in hepatocyte cells. Sometimes they begin as a single tumor; other times they start in multiple spots in the liver. The latter is more common in people with liver damage, such as cirrhosis, and is more prevalent in this country.
- Fibrolamellar HCC is a rare subtype that often has a higher chance for successful treatment than other types of liver cancer.
- Bile duct cancers (cholangiocarcinomas): One or two of every 10 cases of liver cancer start in the bile ducts, which are small tubes that carry bile to the gallbladder. They are treated in the same way as HCC.
- Angiosarcomas and hemangiosarcomas begin in blood vessels in the liver. These fast-growing liver cancers usually are not diagnosed until they are in advanced stages.
- Hepatoblastoma: A very rare type of liver cancer, this most often is found in children. The survival rate is more than 90% if the cancer is caught early.
In addition to cancerous tumors, some tumors in the liver are benign (non-cancerous) but grow large and cause problems. Usually, these can be removed by surgery.
What are the symptoms of Liver Cancer?
Liver cancer usually does not cause symptoms in the early stages. When it does have symptoms, they vary from person to person. As the tumor grows, it may cause:
- Weight loss
- Pain in the right side of the upper abdomen or around the right shoulder blade
- Loss of appetite
- Swelling or bloating in the abdomen
- Hard lump below the ribs on the right side
- Tiredness or weakness
- Nausea or vomiting
- Fever
- Jaundice, which causes yellow skin and eyes, and dark urine
- Feeling of fullness after a small meal
- Itching
- Swollen veins on the abdomen
- Becoming sicker if you have hepatitis or cirrhosis
Certain types of liver cancer produce hormones that may cause:
- High blood-calcium levels that may cause constipation, nausea or confusion
- Low blood-sugar levels that may cause tiredness or faint feeling
- Enlarged breasts or shrinking of testicles in men
- High red blood cell count that may cause redness in the face
These symptoms do not always mean you have liver cancer. However, discussing any symptoms with your doctor is important, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Liver Cancer diagnosed?
Liver cancer often is challenging to diagnose. It usually has no symptoms in the early stages, and tumors often cannot be felt from outside the body. If you have been diagnosed with liver cancer, it is essential to find out exactly where the cancer is and if it has spread. This helps doctors choose the best treatment for you.
Liver cancer diagnostic tests
If you have liver cancer symptoms, the first step is a physical exam. The doctor will:
- Feel your abdomen to examine the liver, spleen, and nearby organs
- Check your abdomen for ascites, an abnormal accumulation of fluid
- Examine your skin and eyes for signs of jaundice
If the doctor suspects liver cancer, you may have one or more of the following tests to diagnose it and find out if it has spread. Blood tests: One common blood test detects alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), which can be a sign of liver cancer. Other blood tests may measure how well the liver is working.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans: This is usually the most reliable test for evaluating the extent of liver cancer.
- Ultrasound
- Angiogram: The doctor injects dye into an artery. This allows the blood vessels in the liver to be seen on an X-ray.
Biopsy: A sample of tissue from the tumor or the healthy part of the liver is removed and looked at under a microscope.’, Healthy tissue may be tested to see how well the liver is working. A biopsy may be obtained by:
- Fine needle aspiration (FNA): A thin needle is inserted into the liver to remove a small amount of tissue.
- Core biopsy: This is similar to FNA, but a thicker needle is used to remove small cylinder-shaped samples (cores).
- Laparoscopy: A small incision (cut) is made in the abdomen, and a thin, lighted tube (laparoscope) is inserted to view the tumor.
- Surgical biopsy: Tissue is removed during an operation.
Surgery is the main treatment for liver cancer. The surgeon must have a high level of skill for it to be successful. Because many people with liver cancer have underlying liver damage, this delicate surgery must remove enough of the tumor to treat the cancer while leaving enough of the liver to function.
Liver cancer surgery has the best outcomes when it is done by a surgeon who performs a large number of these procedures.
Proton therapy
New forms of chemotherapy, including sorafenib, that target the blood vessels that keep tumors alive
Chemoembolization
Hepatic artery infusion to deliver chemotherapy directly to the liver
Targeted therapies to help your body fight the cancer
For the most part, liver cancer can be treated successfully only when it is found in an early stage, before it has spread. Your treatment will depend on:
- The size of the tumor
- Whether you have cirrhosis of the liver
- Your general health
One or more of the following therapies may be suggested to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Liver cancer surgery
The best chance for successful treatment of liver cancer is with surgery. If all of the cancer can be removed, the possibility of successful treatment is higher. However, complete removal of liver cancer often is not possible because the cancer is large or has spread to other parts of the liver or the body. Also, the liver may be damaged because of other conditions. Surgeons try to remove as much of the tumor as possible while keeping enough of the liver to function. Since the liver plays a part in blood clotting, bleeding after surgery is a frequent side effect. And, since the remaining liver still is damaged, the cancer may reappear.
The main types of surgery for liver cancer are:
Liver transplant: The diseased liver is removed, and then it is replaced with a healthy liver from a donor. If you have cirrhosis or if the tumor is large, a liver transplant likely will be the main treatment option. Liver transplant has a risk of serious infection and other health issues.
Partial hepatectomy: The part of the liver where the tumor is located is removed surgically (see illustration).
Tumor ablation: A local treatment in which heat (radiofrequency ablation) or extreme cold (cryosurgery or cryotherapy) is used to freeze or burn the liver cancer away. Ablation may be used when surgical removal of the tumor is not possible.
Embolization: Tiny pellets of plastic or another material are injected into the arteries that carry blood to the tumor. The pellets block blood flow, which makes it harder for liver cancer to grow.
Liver cancer radiation therapy
Because radiation may destroy normal liver tissue as well as cancer cells, it can be used only in low doses for liver cancer. Radiation therapy cannot cure liver cancer, but it may be used to shrink the tumor or relieve pain.
New radiation therapy techniques and remarkable skill allow doctors to target tumors more precisely, delivering the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells.
Liver cancer proton therapy Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly to the liver cancer tumor site, with no damage to nearby healthy tissue. For some patients, this therapy results in a higher chance for successful treatment with less impact on your body.
Liver cancer chemotherapy
Chemotherapy usually is not used to treat liver cancer because of a low response rate. However, researchers are investigating new drugs, such as sorafenib, that target the blood vessels that keep tumors alive.
Experts also are working on new ways to give chemotherapy drugs directly into the liver, delivering higher doses of drugs than usually possible with fewer side effects. These include:
- Chemoembolization: A needle is inserted into an artery in the groin, and then a tiny tube is threaded into an artery leading to the liver. A high dose of medicine then is given. Afterward, the artery is blocked to prevent it from feeding blood to the liver.
- Hepatic artery infusion: A catheter (tube) is placed in the liver. Drugs are infused into a special implanted pump that delivers them continuously.
Lung Cancer
Lung cancers are classified into two major groups according to the type of cancer cells that make up the tumor. They are divided into two main categories: Small cell lung cancer and Non-small cell lung cancer. There are significant differences in the prognosis and treatment for each category.
Non-small cell lung cancer
This is the most common type of lung cancer and accounts for approximately 85% of lung cancers. It arises from the lungs’ epithelial cells, a type of cell that lines the surface of organs, including the airways. These cancers tend to start as solitary nodules. As they grow they may invade surrounding structures or spread (metastasize) to lymph nodes inside the chest as well as to distant organs.
There are several types of non-small cell lung cancer. The most common ones are:
- Adenocarcinoma: This begins in glandular cells that line the alveoli. When healthy, these cells make mucus. The main cause for the development of lung adenocarcinomas is tobacco smoking, although this cancer type can often occur in nonsmokers, women, and at younger ages. Adenocarcinoma often occurs in the more peripheral parts of the lung.
- Squamous cell carcinoma: This lung cancer begins in thin, flat squamous epithelial cells that line the airways of the lungs. Tobacco smoking is its main cause and it tends to arise in the more central regions of the lungs. Squamous cell carcinoma is also called epidermoid carcinoma.
- Large cell carcinoma: Large cell carcinoma is a less common type of non-small cell lung cancer. It tends to grow rapidly and may spread early. It usually originates from neuroendocrine cells present in the lungs.
Small cell lung cancer
Small cell lung cancer makes up about 15% of lung cancers and almost always is caused by tobacco smoking. It often starts in the more central portions of the chest. They also grow and spread quickly to other parts of the body, including the lymph nodes. Because it is so aggressive, it is usually not found when it is confined to a single area of the lung. Therefore, surgery is used less often for small cell lung cancer than non-small cell lung cancer.
Causes and Risk Factors?
A risk factor is anything that increases the chance that a person will develop a particular disease. The main risk factors for lung cancer are:
- A history of or current tobacco use
- Exposure to second-hand smoke
- Exposure to asbestos, arsenic, chromium or other chemicals
- Radiation exposure, including radiation therapy to the breast or chest and radon exposure.
- Living in an area with air pollution
- A family history of lung cancer
- Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus.
What are the symptoms of Lung Cancer?
Lung cancer symptoms vary from person to person. Sometimes people with lung cancer don’t have any symptoms. Often, symptoms are easily confused with common respiratory illnesses such as bronchitis or pneumonia, delaying an accurate diagnosis.
If you have symptoms of lung cancer, they may include:
- A cough that does not go away and gets worse over time
- Constant chest pain, often made worse by deep breathing, coughing or laughing
- Arm or shoulder pain
- Coughing up blood or rust-colored phlegm
- Shortness of breath, wheezing or hoarseness
- Repeated episodes of pneumonia or bronchitis
- Swelling of the neck and face. This occurs when the tumor compresses a large vein, the superior vena cava, that moves blood to the heart from the head and arms
- Loss of appetite and/or weight loss
- Feeling weak or tired
- Widening of the fingertips and nailbed also known as “clubbing.” This symptom is common in non-small cell lung cancer cases, but rare for small cell lung cancer
- If lung cancer spreads to other parts of the body, it may cause:
- Bone pain
- Arm or leg weakness or numbness
- Headache, dizziness or seizure
- Balance problems or an unsteady gait
- Jaundice (yellow coloring) of skin and eyes
- Swollen lymph nodes in the neck or shoulder
These symptoms do not always mean you have lung cancer. However, it is important to discuss any lung cancer symptoms with your doctor, since they may also signal other health problems.In rare cases, lung cancer can be passed down from one generation to the next. Genetic counseling may be right for you.
Early-stage lung cancer often does not have symptoms. In addition, when symptoms appear they can easily be mistaken for common respiratory illnesses like bronchitis or pneumonia. Because of this, many cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage.
Patients at high risk for lung cancer, especially those with a history of smoking, should undergo regular screenings to catch the disease at its early stages when there is a better chance of cure.
If you have symptoms that signal lung cancer, your doctor will ask you questions about your medical, smoking, and family history and whether you have been around certain chemicals or substances.
You will then undergo an imaging exam, typically a chest X-ray. If the image shows an area of concern, the doctor may order other scans, including a CT scan or PET scan, for additional details regarding the area of concern.
If the findings on the imaging scans indicate cancer, the doctor will request that tissue or fluid be removed from the lung and examined by microscope. The act of obtaining a tissue or fluid sample is called a biopsy. There are several ways doctors can perform biopsies of lung tumors:
- Bronchoscopy: A thin flexible tube with a tiny camera is inserted through the nose or mouth and down into the lungs to obtain a small tissue sample (biopsy). This is usually performed under mild sedation.
- Minimally invasive surgery: A CT-guided biopsy where a needle is inserted through the skin under local anesthesia to acquire a tumor sample.
- Fine needle aspiration (FNA): A very small needle is placed into the tumor. Suction is used to remove a small amount of tissue.
- Thoracentesis: Fluid from around the lungs is drawn out with a needle and tested for cancer cells.
- Endobronchial Ultrasound (EBUS): a bronchoscope with an attached ultrasound device is used to check for lung cancer inside nearby chest lymph nodes. EBUS is often performed at the same time as a bronchoscopy and requires general anesthesia.
- Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS): This minimally invasive surgical procedure uses a small camera to help retrieve tumor samples that are otherwise difficult to access. VATS requires a general anesthetic and is performed in the operating room by a thoracic surgeon.
To complete an assessment of how advanced the cancer is, which is called staging, the patient will undergo a PET-CT scan and, in most cases, an MRI of the brain to check for signs of cancer spread to other organs. This will guide the treatment decisions for each patient’s lung cancer.
Your treatment for lung cancer will be customized to your particular needs. It may include one or more of the following therapies to treat the cancer and help relieve symptoms.
Lung Cancer Surgery
Statistically speaking, the more experienced the surgeon, the better the outcomes for lung cancer patients. They operate only on cancers involving the chest and use the most advanced surgical techniques to treat a wide variety of lung cancers, including highly complex cases.
All patients with lung cancer who undergo surgery at the Thoracic Center enroll in a program of enhanced recovery, which aims to minimize pain, surgical stress, and downtime. This leads to faster recovery, fewer side effects, and better quality of life following surgery.
The most common types of surgery for lung cancer, in order of the amount of lung tissue removed, are:
Wedge resection: Removal of the tumor and a pie- or wedge-shaped piece of the lung around the tumor. This procedure is typically used to perform a biopsy of a lung nodule.
Segmentectomy or segmental resection: Removal of a segment, or part, of the lobe where the cancer is located. Both the segmentectomy and wedge resection are typically performed on patients who have limited lung capacity and can’t tolerate the removal of a larger section of the lung. They are also a good option for patients with small early-stage tumors generally measuring less than two centimeters. Both preserve lung capacity and the patient’s quality of life.
Lobectomy: Removal of the lung lobe where the cancer is located. This is considered the “standard of care” for most lung cancer patients who undergo surgery.
Sleeve lobectomy: A more complex form of lobectomy that is typically used for centrally located tumors. Though not always possible, sleeve lobectomies are preferable to pneumonectomy (complete removal of the lung) to preserve more functioning lung tissue.
Pneumonectomy: Removal of the entire lung. This surgery is occasionally required due to the location of the tumor. In people with lungs that are otherwise healthy and function normally, pneumonectomy is well tolerated.
During most of these procedures, the surgeon will also remove lymph nodes from the chest. Since cancer often spreads through these nodes, doctors will examine them under a microscope to find out if the lung cancer has moved outside the lungs. This will help doctors decide if you need further treatment after surgery, such as chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or targeted therapy. Treatment following surgery is called adjuvant therapy.
Occasionally, patients may receive chemotherapy or radiation before surgery to shrink the tumor. This is called neoadjuvant therapy.
Surgical approaches
For some lung cancer surgeries, there are different ways to perform the same procedure. Your surgeon will work with you to choose the best option. These methods include:
- Open surgery: The traditional surgical method. Surgeons perform the procedure through a four- to eight-inch incision between the ribs.
- Minimally invasive surgery: These procedures require several smaller incisions, typically between ¼ and ½ inch, and usually have a shorter recovery time and less pain for the patient. There are two primary methods of minimally invasive surgery for lung cancer patients.
- Video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) or thoracoscopy: This technique uses a small camera and instruments that are inserted into the chest allowing the surgeon to perform the surgery through small incisions. It is typically performed on patients with small, early-stage lung cancers.
- Robotic-assisted Surgery: This newer method of minimally invasive surgery uses robotic arms remotely controlled by the surgeon. Better images of the surgical site and greater instrument dexterity allow the surgeon to perform more complex surgery than is possible with VATS.
Lung Cancer Radiation Therapy
At most hospitals, radiation oncologists are expected to treat several different types of cancer. Thoracic Center has radiation oncologists dedicated exclusively to caring for patients with lung cancer. This gives them incredibly deep experience in designing treatment plans.
Working with these radiation oncologists is a team of radiation therapy specialists, including dosimetrists and medical physicists, that helps deliver the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells. The radiation therapy treatments used for lung cancer patients include:
- 3D-conformal radiation therapy: Several radiation beams are given in the exact shape of the tumor. This is primarily used as a palliative treatment and not to cure the disease.
- Brachytherapy: Tiny radioactive seeds are placed in the body close to the tumor. Brachytherapy is primarily used to treat metastatic growths in the airway. Since most of these growths can be treated with external beam radiation, brachytherapy is rarely used on lung cancer patients.
- Intensity-modulate radiotherapy (IMRT): Treatment is tailored to the specific shape of the tumor. This type of radiation is commonly used to treat cancers that have invaded nearby lymph nodes.
- Volumetric-modulate Arc therapy (VMAT): A type of IMRT, in VMAT therapy, the part of the machine that shoots out the beam of radiation rotates around the patient in an arc. This can irradiate the tumor more precisely and shorten procedure times.
- Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT): High doses of radiation delivered with several beams at various intensities and angles to precisely target the tumor. Learn more about SBRT.
Lung cancer proton therapy
A type of radiation therapy, proton therapy delivers a high dose of radiation directly to the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and organs.
Systemic Therapy for Lung Cancer
There have been significant advances in the treatment of lung cancer through the last decades.
Targeted therapy for lung cancer
Cancer cells use specific molecules (often in the form of proteins) to survive, multiply and spread. Targeted therapies stop or slow the growth of cancer by interfering with, or targeting, these molecules. Currently, there are targeted therapies for many subtypes of adenocarcinoma.
Immunotherapy for lung cancer
Immunotherapies recruit the body’s immune system in the fight against cancer. The current standard of care for non-small cell lung cancer includes the use of checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapies, which take the natural “brakes” off the immune system, allowing it to attack cancer cells. This treatment can lead to durable responses and has revolutionized care for lung cancer patients.
Chemotherapy for lung cancer
Chemotherapy uses drugs to directly kill cancer cells by stopping their growth. This form of treatment is commonly combined with immunotherapy. In combination, both drugs become more effective.
Melanoma
Melanoma is a skin cancer that starts in melanocytes (cells that make melanin), which give skin its pigment, or color. Sometimes these cells change, often because of damage caused by sun exposure. Over time, this damage may result in cancer. While melanoma accounts for only 3% of all types of skin cancer, it has the highest death rate of all types and is more likely to spread (metastasize) in the body. It is also one of the most frequently occurring cancers in young adults ages 20 to 30 and is the main cause of cancer death in women 25 to 30 years old.
Melanoma usually appears as an:
- Irregular brown, black and/or red spot or
- Existing mole that begins to change color, size or shape
Melanoma appears most commonly on the trunk area in fair-skinned men and the lower legs in fair-skinned women. In dark-skinned people, melanoma appears most frequently on the palms, the soles of the feet, and the skin under the nails. If caught early, melanoma is often curable.
Melanoma Types
Melanoma is divided into several types. The treatment and outlook for each is different.
Cutaneous Melanoma
There are four major types of cutaneous melanoma:
Superficial spreading melanoma:
- Most common melanoma type
- About 70% of cases
- Usually starts in a pre-existing mole
Nodular melanoma:
- Second most common melanoma type
- 15% to 30% of cases
- More aggressive and usually develops quicker than superficial spreading melanomas
Lentigo maligna melanoma:
- Appears as large, flat lesions
- Most commonly found on the faces of light-skinned women over 50
- 4% to 10% of cases
- Lower risk of spreading than other melanoma types
Acral lentiginous melanoma:
- Occurs on the palms, soles of the feet, or beneath the nail beds
- 2% to 8% of melanomas in fair-skinned patients
- Up to 60% of melanomas in darker-skinned patients
- Large, with an average diameter of 3 centimeters
Mucosal Melanoma
- About 1% of melanoma cases
- Occurs in mucosal tissue, which lines body cavities and hollow organs
- Most common sites are the head and neck region (including the nasal cavity, mouth, and esophagus), rectum, urinary tract, and vagina
- Can be very difficult to detect
- Even when diagnosed and treated, the prognosis is often poor
Ocular Melanoma
Because the eyes contain melanocytes, they can be susceptible to melanoma. Read more about the two types of ocular melanoma:
- Uveal Melanoma
- Conjunctival Melanoma
Cause and Risk Factor
Anything that increases your chance of getting melanoma is a risk factor.
Sun damage, especially a history of peeling sunburns, is the main risk factor for melanoma. Artificial sunlight from tanning beds causes the same risk for melanoma as natural sunlight.
Other risk factors for melanoma include:
- Fair complexion: People with blond or red hair, light skin, blue eyes and a tendency to sunburn are at increased risk.
- Previous melanoma
- Moles (nevi): Having a lot of benign (non-cancer) moles
- Family history of melanoma
- Atypical mole and melanoma syndrome (AMS): Previously known as dysplastic nevus syndrome, large numbers of atypical moles characterize AMS. If you have AMS, you and your family members should be screened regularly
Not everyone with risk factors gets melanoma. However, if you have risk factors, discussing them with your healthcare provider is a good idea.
What are the symptoms of Melanoma?
While signs and symptoms of melanoma vary from person to person, the ABCDEFs of melanoma symptoms are an easy way to learn the early signs of melanoma.
- Asymmetry: Is one side of the mole different than the other?
- Border irregularity: Are the edges ragged or irregular?
- Color variation: Is the mole getting darker? Is part of it changing color or does it contain several colors?
- Diameter: Is the mole bigger than the diameter of a pencil eraser?
- Evolution: Is the mole growing in width or height?
- Feeling: Has the sensation around a mole or spot changed?
Show any suspicious skin area, non-healing sore, or new or changing mole or freckle to your doctor right away.
How is Melanoma diagnosed?
Early and accurate melanoma diagnosis is important. This helps find out if the melanoma has spread and helps your doctor choose the most effective treatment.
- Diagnostic Tests
If you have signs or symptoms that may signal melanoma, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health, your lifestyle, and your family history. If your doctor suspects a spot may be melanoma, a biopsy will be done.
- Melanoma Biopsy
Skin cancer cannot be diagnosed just by looking at it. If a mole or pigmented area of the skin changes or looks abnormal, your doctor may biopsy the mark, taking a tissue sample for a pathologist to examine. Suspicious areas should not simply be shaved off or cauterized (destroyed with a hot instrument, an electrical current, or a caustic substance). A biopsy should be performed first to determine if the area is malignant.
Your doctor may use one of these melanoma biopsy methods:
- Local excision/excisional biopsy: The entire suspicious area is removed with a scalpel under local anesthetic. Depending on the size and location of the suspicious area, this type of biopsy may be done in a doctor’s office or as an outpatient procedure at a hospital. Your doctor will put in stitches to close the excision and cover the area with a bandage.
- Punch biopsy: The doctor uses a tool to punch through the suspicious area and remove a round cylinder of tissue.
- Shave biopsy: The doctor shaves off a piece of the growth.
- The sample of skin is sent to a pathologist, who looks at it under a microscope to check for cancer cells. Your tissue may be judged normal or abnormal. Abnormal results may include:
- Benign (non-cancerous) growths such as moles, warts and benign skin tumors
- Squamous cell carcinoma (cancer)
- Basal cell carcinoma
- Melanoma
- Because melanoma can be hard to diagnose, you should consider having your biopsy checked by a second pathologist.
- As with any time the skin is cut, there is a small risk of infection after a biopsy. You should call your doctor if you have a fever, an increase in pain, reddening or swelling at the infection site, or continued bleeding.
- If your skin usually scars when injured, the biopsy may leave a scar. For this reason, a biopsy on the face might be better performed by a surgeon or dermatologist who specializes in methods that reduce scarring.
- Before you have a skin biopsy, you should tell your doctor what medications you are taking, including anti-inflammatory medication, which may make your biopsy look different to the pathologist, or blood thinners like Coumadin or aspirin, which could cause bleeding problems.
After melanoma has been diagnosed, tests may be recommended to find out if cancer cells have spread within the skin or to other parts of the body. These may include:
Imaging tests, such as:
- Chest X-ray
- Lymphoscintigraphy
- Ultrasound
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
The best treatment for you depends on the size and stage of your cancer, your overall health, and your personal preferences. Treating early-stage melanomas
Treatment for early-stage melanomas usually includes surgery to remove the melanoma. A very thin melanoma may be removed entirely during the biopsy and require no further treatment. Otherwise, your surgeon will remove the cancer as well as a border of normal skin and a layer of tissue beneath the skin. For people with early-stage melanomas, this may be the only treatment needed.
Treating melanomas that have spread beyond the skin
If melanoma has spread beyond the skin, treatment options may include:
- Surgery to remove affected lymph nodes. If melanoma has spread to nearby lymph nodes, your surgeon may remove the affected nodes. Additional treatments before or after surgery also may be recommended.
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy uses drugs to destroy cancer cells. Chemotherapy can be given intravenously, in pill form, or both so that it travels throughout your body.
Chemotherapy can also be given in a vein in your arm or leg in a procedure called isolated limb perfusion. During this procedure, blood in your arm or leg isn’t allowed to travel to other areas of your body for a short time so that the chemotherapy drugs travel directly to the area around the melanoma and don’t affect other parts of your body.
- Radiation therapy. This treatment uses high-powered energy beams, such as X-rays, to kill cancer cells. Radiation therapy may be recommended after surgery to remove the lymph nodes. It’s sometimes used to help relieve symptoms of melanoma that has spread to another area of the body.
- Biological therapy. Biological therapy boosts your immune system to help your body fight cancer. These treatments are made of substances produced by the body or similar substances produced in a laboratory. Side effects of these treatments are similar to those of the flu, including chills, fatigue, fever, headache and muscle aches.
Biological therapies used to treat melanoma include interferon and interleukin-2, ipilimumab (Yervoy), nivolumab (Opdivo), and pembrolizumab (Keytruda).
- Targeted therapy. Targeted therapy uses medications designed to target specific vulnerabilities in cancer cells. Side effects of targeted therapies vary, but tend to include skin problems, fever, chills and dehydration.
Metastatic Brain Tumors
Sometimes brain tumors start in the lung, breast, skin, kidney, or other body parts and spread to the brain. These are called secondary or metastatic brain tumors.
Metastatic brain tumors (also called secondary brain tumors) are caused by cancer cells spreading (metastasizing) to the brain from a different part of the body.
The cancer cells break away from the primary tumor and travel to the brain, usually through the bloodstream, then commonly go to the part of the brain called the cerebral hemispheres or to the cerebellum. Cancer can also spread to the spine (metastatic spine tumors).
Metastatic brain tumors are five times more common than primary brain tumors (those that originate in the brain).
Metastatic brain tumors can grow rapidly, crowding or destroying nearby brain tissue. Sometimes a patient may have multiple metastatic tumors in several different areas of the brain.
Cause and Risk Factor
What are the symptoms of Metastatic Brain Tumors?
Common signs and symptoms
- Headaches
- Seizures
- Weakness in the arms or legs
- Loss of balance
- Memory loss
- Speech disturbance
Other symptoms
- Behaviour and personality changes
- Blurred vision/vision disturbance
- Numbness
- Hearing loss
How is Metastatic Brain Tumors Diagnosed?
Metastatic brain and spine tumors are not usually diagnosed until symptoms appear. Here are some ways doctors may diagnose a metastatic brain tumor:
- Physical exam: After gathering information about your symptoms and personal and family health history, the doctor proceeds with a physical exam and vision and reflex tests.
- Neurological exam
- Computed tomography (CT or CAT scan)
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
- Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI): This scan allows the surgeon and treating team to visualize the circuitry (or wiring) of the brain to guide the surgery. These images can then be loaded into navigation systems that are used in the operating room to serve as a kind of GPS and map for the surgeon.
- Biopsy
It is important to know that metastatic brain tumors are often treatable and can be well controlled.
Optimal treatment for metastatic brain or spine tumors is tailored to each patient. The neurosurgeon determines the most appropriate treatment approach, considering these factors:
- The type of primary cancer the patient has, response to treatment and current status
- The location and number of metastatic tumors within the brain or spine
- The patient’s general health and preferences regarding potential treatment options
- The patient’s current symptoms
Surgery
Surgery provides fast relief of the “mass effect” — the pressure inside the skull resulting from a growing tumor and swelling of the brain. Patients can experience improvement within hours of surgery if the mass effect is what is causing their symptoms.
The goal of surgery is to minimize the amount of space the tumor takes up by debulking, and removing as much of the tumor as possible while maintaining the patient’s neurological function.
In general, doctors recommend surgery when:
- There is a clear correlation of neurologic deficits with the tumor’s location
- The patient’s primary cancer is treatable and under control
- A patient has one or two metastatic brain tumors, or a few tumors that are close to each other that can be safely removed
The most common type of surgery to remove metastatic brain tumors is called a craniotomy, which can be performed through a variety of approaches, including the keyhole craniotomy.
The surgeon may choose a microsurgery procedure, and use newer tools — such as image-guided surgery and minimally invasive endoscopy — to ensure the best chance for a good outcome.
Radiation
Radiation therapy is the treatment of tumors using X-rays and other forms of radiation (light energy) to destroy cancer cells or prevent a tumor from growing. It is also called radiotherapy.
These painless treatments involve passing beams of radiation through the body, which can treat cancers in areas of the brain that are difficult to reach through surgery. Procedures may include any one or combination of the following:
- Whole-brain radiation
- External beam radiation therapy
- Stereotactic radiosurgery (e.g., fractionated radiosurgery)
- Liquid radiation
These procedures may also be performed after surgery to prevent tumors from growing near the site of the tumor removal and into other brain tissue.
Choosing radiation therapy is complex and often involves a team approach. Some patients receive a form of radiation therapy called stereotactic radiosurgery instead of surgery. Other patients will receive whole-brain radiation or a combination of both therapies, depending on what the treatment team determines is best.
The Radiation Team
Treatment planning for radiation therapy includes mapping to pinpoint the exact location of the tumor using X-rays or other images.
A radiation oncologist uses these images to create a three-dimensional picture of the patient’s brain. For some types of radiation therapy, a custom-fitted mask is created to increase the precision of the treatment. Fiducials — small markers temporarily attached to the scalp — may also be used.
A radiation oncologist then designs the patient’s treatment, determining the most appropriate radiation dose (the level of radiation energy to be used) and delivery method.
A dosimetrist or medical physicist (professionals who specialize in using radiation therapy equipment and calculating and measuring radiation) will calculate the dose, the angle of the treatment beam, and the amount of time for each beam. After they work with the radiation oncologist to review the calculations, the treatments can be scheduled.
Chemotherapy
Because traditional chemotherapy cannot cross the blood-brain barrier, a new treatment called targeted therapy is used as the primary type of chemotherapy for treating metastatic brain tumors.
These drugs identify and attack cancer cells (the target) with minimal harm to normal cells while preventing the growth and spread of cancer cells. Targeted therapy can be administered after surgery or in conjunction with radiation therapy to destroy remaining cancer cells. Targeted therapies used to treat metastatic brain tumors include:
- Trastuzumab for breast cancer that has metastasized to the brain
- Erlotinib for the most common type of lung cancer (non-small cell lung cancer) that has metastasized to the brain
Immunotherapy
Cancer immunotherapy is a fast-growing field of research that seeks to develop drugs, vaccines, and other therapies that trigger the immune system’s natural abilities to fight cancer.
Multiple Myeloma
Multiple myeloma is a cancer of the bone marrow involving plasma cells, which are mature lymphocytes that produce antibodies. Abnormal plasma cells (myeloma cells) build up in the bone marrow and can lead to several different clinical manifestations, including bone lesions, a decrease in blood counts such as anemia, and impairment in kidney function.
As a result of the availability of new and more effective drugs for the treatment of multiple myeloma, the prognosis of people diagnosed with this condition has improved significantly in recent years. Many patients can lead active lives for long periods with relatively few symptoms associated with their disease.
Cause and Risk Factor
Although its exact cause is unknown, multiple myeloma can be controlled in most patients, sometimes for many years. However, certain things appear to make you more likely to develop multiple myeloma:
- Age: Over 65
- Gender: Men are slightly more likely to develop multiple myeloma.
- Race: African Americans are twice as likely as white Americans to develop multiple myeloma.
- Radiation exposure
- Family history: If a parent, brother, or sister has the disease, your risk is four times higher. However, this is rare.
- Working in oil-related industry: While some studies suggest this, it has not been proven.
- Obesity
- Other plasma cell diseases: If you have had one of the following you are at higher risk:
- A precancerous condition called monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS)
- A single tumor of plasma cells (solitary plasmacytoma)
What are the symptoms of Multiple Myeloma?
Multiple myeloma often doesn’t have symptoms at first. This can make it difficult to diagnose in the early stages. Symptoms of multiple myeloma may include:
- Fractures: Myeloma cells produce substances called cytokines, which can trigger bone cells (osteoclasts) to destroy surrounding bone. When more than 30% of the bone has been destroyed, X-rays show a thinning of the bone (osteoporosis) or dark holes (lytic lesions). The weakened area of bone is more likely to break. This is called a pathological fracture. Bone pain, especially in the middle and/or lower back, rib cage or hips. The pain can be mild or severe depending on the extent of the multiple myeloma, the speed with which it has developed, and whether fracture or nerve compression has occurred. Typically, movement makes the pain much worse.
- Fatigue and/or shortness of breath: Myeloma can cause anemia for some patients which can lead to feeling short of breath with exertion or tiredness more than usual.
- Confusion: For some patients, bone involvement of myeloma can lead to high calcium levels in the blood and/or kidney failure. This can lead to confusion.
- Appetite changes: High calcium levels in the blood and/or kidney failure can also cause a decrease in appetite, weight loss, and nausea.
- Infection: Because myeloma cells crowd out normal white blood cells, which fight infection, there is a risk of infection. Common myeloma infections include pneumonia, bladder or kidney infections, sinusitis, and skin infections.
How is Multiple Myeloma diagnosed?
In addition to a complete medical history and physical examination, diagnostic procedures for multiple myeloma may include the following:
- X-ray. A diagnostic test that uses invisible electromagnetic energy beams to produce images of internal tissues, bones, and organs onto film. Bone scans are used to evaluate bone involvement with most cancers, but they are unreliable in multiple myeloma.
- Blood and urine tests. These tests are used to look for proteins or other substances that are more likely to be seen in the blood or urine of people with myeloma.
- Bone marrow aspiration and/or biopsy. A procedure that involves taking a small amount of bone marrow fluid (aspiration) and/or solid bone marrow tissue (called a core biopsy), usually from the hip bones, to be examined for the number, size, and maturity of blood cells and/or abnormal cells.
- Skeletal survey. A series of plain X-rays of all of the major bones in the body.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A diagnostic procedure that uses a combination of large magnets, radio frequencies, and a computer to produce detailed images of organs and structures within the body.
- Computed tomography scan (also called a CT or CAT scan). A diagnostic imaging procedure that uses a combination of X-rays and computer technology to produce horizontal, or axial, images (often called slices) of the body. A CT scan shows detailed images of any part of the body, including the bones, muscles, fat, and organs. CT scans are more detailed than general X-rays (but often not quite as detailed as MRI scans).
- Positron emission tomography (PET) scan. Radioactive-tagged glucose (sugar) is injected into the bloodstream. Tissues that use glucose more than normal tissues (such as tumors) can be detected by a scanning machine. PET scans can be used to find small tumors throughout the body
Specific treatment for multiple myeloma will be determined by your doctor based on:
- Your age, overall health, and medical history
- Extent of the disease
- Your tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies
- Expectations for the course of the disease
- Your opinion or preference
Treatments for myeloma
Standard treatment options include:
- Targeted therapy. Targeted drug treatment focuses on specific abnormalities within cancer cells that allow them to survive. Bortezomib (Velcade), carfilzomib (Kyprolis) and ixazomib (Ninlaro) are targeted drugs that block the action of a substance in myeloma cells that breaks down proteins. This action causes myeloma cells to die. Targeted therapy drugs may be administered through a vein in your arm or in pill form.
Other targeted therapy treatments include monoclonal antibody drugs that bind to the specific proteins present in myeloma cells, causing them to die.
- Biological therapy. Biological therapy drugs use your body’s immune system to fight myeloma cells. The drugs thalidomide (Thalomid), lenalidomide (Revlimid), and pomalidomide (Pomalyst) enhance the immune system cells that identify and attack cancer cells. These medications are commonly taken in pill form.
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy drugs kill fast-growing cells, including myeloma cells. Chemotherapy drugs can be given through a vein in your arm or taken in pill form. High doses of chemotherapy drugs are used before a bone marrow transplant.
- Corticosteroids. Corticosteroids, such as prednisone and dexamethasone, regulate the immune system to control inflammation in the body. They are also active against myeloma cells. Corticosteroids can be taken in pill form or administered through a vein in your arm.
- Bone marrow transplant. A bone marrow transplant, also known as a stem cell transplant, is a procedure to replace your diseased bone marrow with healthy bone marrow.
Before a bone marrow transplant, blood-forming stem cells are collected from your blood. You then receive high doses of chemotherapy to destroy your diseased bone marrow. Then your stem cells are infused into your body, where they travel to your bones and begin rebuilding your bone marrow.
- Radiation therapy. This treatment uses beams of energy, such as X-rays and protons, to damage myeloma cells and stop their growth. Radiation therapy may be used to quickly shrink myeloma cells in a specific area — for instance, when a collection of abnormal plasma cells forms a tumor (plasmacytoma) that’s causing pain or destroying a bone.
Neuroendocrine Tumors
Neuroendocrine tumors are abnormal growths that begin in specialized cells called neuroendocrine cells. Neuroendocrine cells have traits similar to nerve cells and to hormone-producing cells.
Neuroendocrine tumors are rare and can occur anywhere in the body. Most neuroendocrine tumors occur in the lungs, appendix, small intestine, rectum and pancreas.Neuroendocrine tumors can be noncancerous (benign) or cancerous (malignant).
Diagnosis and treatment of neuroendocrine tumors depend on the type of tumor, its location, whether it produces excess hormones, how aggressive it is and whether it has spread to other parts of the body. Types of Neuroendocrine tumors:
- Pheochromocytoma. Pheochromocytoma is a rare tumor that begins in the chromaffin cells of the adrenal gland. These specialized cells release the hormone adrenaline during times of stress. Pheochromocytoma most often occurs in the adrenal medulla, the area inside the adrenal glands. This type of tumor increases the production of the hormones adrenaline and noradrenaline, which increase blood pressure and heart rate. Even though a pheochromocytoma is usually benign, it may still be life-threatening because the tumor may release large amounts of adrenaline into the bloodstream after injury. Among people with pheochromocytoma, 80% have a tumor in 1 adrenal gland, 10% have tumors in both glands, and 10% have a tumor outside the adrenal glands.
- Merkel cell cancer. Merkel cell cancer is a highly aggressive, or fast-growing, rare cancer. It starts in hormone-producing cells just beneath the skin and in the hair follicles. It is usually found in the head and neck region. Merkel cell cancer may also be called neuroendocrine carcinoma of the skin or trabecular cancer.
- Neuroendocrine carcinoma. Around 60% of neuroendocrine tumors cannot be described as anything other than “neuroendocrine carcinoma.” Neuroendocrine carcinoma can start in a number of places in the body, including the lungs, brain, and gastrointestinal tract.
Cause and Risk Factor
A risk factor is anything that increases a person’s chance of developing a tumor. Although risk factors often influence the development of a neuroendocrine tumor, most do not directly cause it. Some people with several risk factors never develop a tumor, while others with no known risk factors do. However, knowing your risk factors and talking about them with your doctor may help you make more informed lifestyle and health care choices.
The following factors can raise a person’s risk of developing a neuroendocrine tumor:
- Age. Pheochromocytoma is most common in people between the ages of 40 and 60. Merkel cell cancer is most common in people older than 70.
- Gender. Men are more likely to develop pheochromocytoma than women. For every 2 women who develop pheochromocytoma, 3 men will develop the disease. Men are also more likely to develop Merkel cell cancer than women.
- Race/ethnicity. White people are most likely to develop Merkel cell cancer; however, some black people and people of Polynesian descent develop the disease.
- Family history. Ten percent (10%) of pheochromocytomas are linked to hereditary, or genetic, causes. Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) is a hereditary condition that increases the risk of developing a tumor in the pituitary gland, parathyroid gland, and pancreas. Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2) is a hereditary condition associated with medullary thyroid cancer and other types of cancer, including pheochromocytoma.
- Immune system suppression. People with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), and people whose immune systems are suppressed because of an organ transplant have a higher risk of developing a neuroendocrine tumor.
- Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV). Research indicates that there is a link between this virus and Merkel cell cancer. MCV is present in up to an estimated 80% of Merkel cell cancers. However, scientists believe MCV is common, while Merkel cell cancer is not. More research is needed to learn the role of MCV.
- Arsenic exposure. Exposure to the poison arsenic may increase the risk of Merkel cell cancer.
- Sun exposure. Because Merkel cell cancer often occurs on the sun-exposed areas of the head and neck, many doctors think that sun exposure may be a risk factor for this type of cancer. Learn more about protecting your skin from the sun.
What are the symptoms of Neuroendocrine Tumors?
- Hyperglycemia, which is a high level of glucose in the blood. Glucose is a sugar that is converted into energy by the body.
- Hyperglycemia causes frequent urination, increased thirst, and increased hunger.
- Hypoglycemia, which is a low level of glucose in the blood. It causes fatigue, nervousness and shakiness, dizziness or light-headedness, sweating, seizures, and fainting.
- Diarrhea
- Persistent pain in a specific area
- Loss of appetite or weight loss
- A cough or hoarseness that does not go away
- Thickening or lump in any part of the body
- Changes in bowel or bladder habits
- Unexplained weight gain or loss
- Jaundice, which is the yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes
- Unusual bleeding or discharge
- Persistent fever or night sweats
- Headaches
- Anxiety
- Gastric ulcer disease
- Skin rash
- Some people also experience nutritional deficiencies before a diagnosis, such as niacin and protein deficiency. Others develop this symptom later.
Symptoms of pheochromocytoma
Multiple myeloma often doesn’t have symptoms at first. This can make it difficult to diagnose in the early stages. Symptoms of multiple myeloma may include:
- High blood pressure
- Anxiety attacks
- Fever
- Headaches
- Sweating
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Clammy skin
- Rapid pulse
- Heart palpitations
Symptoms of Merkel cell cancer
- Painless, firm, shiny lumps on the skin that can be red, pink, or blue
How is Neuroendocrine Tumors diagnosed?
In addition to a physical examination, the following tests may be used to diagnose a neuroendocrine tumor:
- Blood/urine tests. The doctor may collect blood and urine samples to check for abnormal levels of hormones and other substances. Urine tests check for increased levels of adrenaline in the body. Large amounts of adrenaline can be a sign of pheochromocytoma.
The glucagon stimulation test and clonidine (Catapres) suppression test are blood tests that measure adrenaline levels for people who sometimes have symptoms of pheochromocytoma. During the glucagon stimulation test, glucagon is injected into a vein. Glucagon is a hormone produced by the pancreas that helps the body process carbohydrates. Blood samples are then drawn at specific times to measure adrenaline levels.
During the clonidine suppression test, a tablet of the drug clonidine is swallowed, and blood samples are taken at regular intervals over the next 3 hours. Clonidine is used to lower adrenaline levels in the blood, so if these levels do not decrease during testing, it may be a sign of a tumor. Blood pressure and heart rate are also carefully monitored during these tests.
- X-ray. An x-ray is a way to create a picture of the structures inside of the body, using a small amount of radiation.
- Computed tomography (CT or CAT) scan. A CT scan creates a 3-dimensional picture of the inside of the body using x-rays taken from different angles. A computer then combines these images into a detailed, cross-sectional view that shows any abnormalities or tumor. A CT scan can also be used to measure a tumor’s size. Sometimes, a special dye called a contrast medium is given before the scan to provide better detail on the image. This dye can be injected into a patient’s vein or given as a liquid to swallow.
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). An MRI uses magnetic fields, not x-rays, to produce detailed images of the body. MRI can also be used to measure a tumor’s size. A special dye called a contrast medium is given before the scan to create a clearer picture. This dye can be injected into a patient’s vein or given as a liquid to swallow.
- Biopsy. A biopsy is the removal of a small amount of tissue for examination under a microscope. A pathologist then analyzes the sample(s) removed during the biopsy. A pathologist is a doctor who specializes in interpreting laboratory tests and evaluating cells, tissues, and organs to diagnose disease. Other tests can suggest that a tumor is present, but only a biopsy can make a definite diagnosis.
- Molecular testing of the tumor. Your doctor may recommend running laboratory tests on a tumor sample to identify specific genes, proteins, and other factors unique to the tumor. Results of these tests will help decide whether your treatment options include a type of treatment called targeted therapy. See the Treatment Options section for more information.
- Positron emission tomography (PET) or PET-CT scan. A PET scan is usually combined with a CT scan, called a PET-CT scan. However, you may hear your doctor refer to this procedure just as a PET scan. A PET scan is a way to create pictures of organs and tissues inside the body. A small amount of a radioactive sugar substance is injected into the patient’s body. This sugar substance is taken up by cells that use the most energy. Because cancer tends to use energy actively, it absorbs more of the radioactive substance. A scanner then detects this substance to produce images of the inside of the body. Some centers are researching the role of PET or PET-CT scans regarding Merkel cell cancer, for both staging and ongoing monitoring of patients during treatment.
Treatment for NETs varies, depending largely on the type and stage of the disease. Common treatment options for neuroendocrine tumors include:
Surgery
Removing the primary tumor with surgery is often the first approach recommended for patients with localized NETs. The goal of surgery is to fully remove a neuroendocrine tumor or reduce the tumor burden. Surgery may also be an option for those with advanced disease, to help relieve symptoms. Some surgical procedures for NETs include debulking or cytoreductive surgery, minimally invasive laparoscopic resections and liver transplantation.
Medical oncology
Depending on the type of NET and treatment goals, chemotherapy, hormone therapy and/or targeted therapy may be used to manage certain types of NETs, including advanced tumors. Some targeted therapies for pancreatic NETs include everolimus and sunitinib. Chemoembolization, in which chemotherapy drugs are administered directly into the tumor, may be an option if the disease has metastasized to the liver.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy is generally used when a neuroendocrine tumor has spread or is in a location that makes surgery difficult. CyberKnife® may be a non-invasive option for some patients and enables our radiation oncologists to deliver high, targeted doses of radiation to NETs. For metastatic disease to the liver, TheraSphere® and SIR-Spheres® offer innovative options that deliver radiation directly to tumors in the liver.
Interventional radiology
Radiofrequency ablation may be used for NETs that have spread to the liver. This type of interventional radiology uses high-energy radio waves to heat and destroy cancerous cells. NanoKnife® may be a minimally invasive option for patients with inoperable or difficult-to-reach tumors. Instead of using extreme heat or cold, which may damage normal adjacent tissues, the NanoKnife system uses electrical currents to destroy NETs. For NETs that have spread to the liver, embolization procedures may help reduce or cut off the supply of blood to the tumor.
Gastroenterology
A wide range of treatment options for gastrointestinal NETs are available . Gastroenterologist uses various technologies to look at the GI tract in different and minimally invasive ways. He may recommend innovative techniques and ablative treatments to help remove obstructions in the GI tract and relieve pain or breathing problems.
Molecular targeted therapy
Peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (PRRT) is a molecular-targeted therapy that may be used to treat certain NETs. Molecular targeted therapies use drugs or other substances to identify and attack cancer cells while reducing harm to healthy tissue.
Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
Lymphoma is a general term for cancers that develop in the lymphatic system (the tissues and organs that produce, store and carry white blood cells). Lymphomas that do not start in white blood cells are called non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.They may start in the bone marrow, spleen, thymus or lymph nodes and spread to other parts of the body.
Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma is the seventh most common cancer in men and women in the world.
Cause and Risk Factor
In most cases, people diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma don’t have any obvious risk factors. And many people who have risk factors for the disease never develop it.
Some factors that may increase the risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma include:
- Medications that suppress your immune system. If you’ve had an organ transplant, you’re more susceptible because immunosuppressive therapy has reduced your body’s ability to fight new illnesses.
- Infection with certain viruses and bacteria. Certain viral and bacterial infections appear to increase the risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Viruses linked to increased non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma risk include HIV and Epstein-Barr infection. Bacteria linked to an increased risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma include the ulcer-causing Helicobacter pylori.
- Chemicals. Certain chemicals, such as those used to kill insects and weeds, may increase your risk of developing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. More research is needed to understand the possible link between pesticides and the development of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
- Older age. Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma can occur at any age, but the risk increases with age. It’s most common in people 60 or over.
What are the symptoms of Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma?
Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma symptoms vary from person to person. They may include:
- Painless swelling of lymph nodes in the neck, groin, or underarm
- Fevers
- Heavy night sweats
- Tiredness
- Weight loss without a known reason
- Severe itchiness
- Reddened patches on the skin
- Nausea, vomiting or abdominal pain
- Coughing or shortness of breath
- Headaches, concentration problems, personality changes
Symptoms of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma also often differ by the type of disease. Low-grade (indolent) non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma develops slowly. Patients may have painless swelling of lymph nodes (usually in the neck or over the collarbone) but appear healthy otherwise. The swelling may go away for a while and then return. If low-grade non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma spreads outside the lymph nodes, there may be discomfort in the affected area.
Aggressive non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma grows quicker and tends to have more symptoms than low-grade non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Symptoms may include:
- Pain in neck, arms or abdomen
- Fever and/or night sweats
- Unexplained weight loss
- Fatigue
- Shortness of breath
- Weakness in arms and/or legs
- Confusion
How is Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma diagnosed?
Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Diagnostic Tests
If you have symptoms that may signal non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health and your medical history. One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
- Lymph node biopsy: A small piece of tissue is removed from a lymph node and looked at under a microscope. Sometimes the entire node is removed.
- Imaging tests, which may include:
- X-rays
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- Blood tests: To determine if blood cells are normal in number and appearance and if blood chemistry is normal. If you have been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, certain blood tests may help doctors determine your outlook.
- Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy
- Liver and kidney function tests
- Echocardiogram: To evaluate the size and function of the heart.
- Immunophenotyping: Cells from a lymph node, blood or bone marrow are examined with a microscope to determine what type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma cells are present.
- Pulmonary function test: Finds out how well the lungs function.
If you are diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including:
- Type of lymphoma
- Stage and category of disease
- Symptoms
- Your age and general health
Your treatment for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma cancer will be customized to your particular needs. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Chemotherapy
This is the treatment most often used for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. And since chemotherapy may lower certain types of blood cells, a transfusion of a type of drug called blood cell growth factors may be needed. Liposomal drug delivery is an advanced way of giving chemotherapy that may help it be more effective.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy may be used in early-stage lymphoma or to help symptoms such as pain. It is seldom the only treatment given.
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly to the tumor site, with no damage to nearby healthy tissue. For some patients, this therapy results in better cancer control with fewer side effects.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy for Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma may include:
- Monoclonal antibodies, including Rituximab
- Biological therapies that develop antibodies to help the body fight the cancer
- Proteasome inhibitors, such as Velcade
- Immune modulators, such as thalidomide and lenalidomide, that modify the environment of the tumor cell and allow it to die
- Targeted therapies that attack cancer cells by using small molecules to block pathways cells used to survive and multiply
- Small molecule treatments such as panobinostat
- Cytokine therapies
- Interferon is made by the body to help fight infection. Sometimes interferon that has been made in the laboratory is given to patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
Stem cell transplantation: If non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma does not respond to chemotherapy or if it returns, your doctor may recommend a stem cell transplant. Also, since chemotherapy often destroys healthy cells in the blood and bone marrow, patients who have certain types of chemotherapy may need stem cell transplants.
Radioimmunotherapy pairs a monoclonal antibody to a radioactive substance to target cancer cells.
Oral Cancer
Oral cancer (also known as mouth cancer or oral cavity cancer) is most often found in the tongue, the lips, and the floor of the mouth. It also can begin in the gums, the minor salivary glands, the lining of the lips and cheeks, the roof of the mouth, or the area behind the wisdom teeth.
The majority of oral cancers arise in the squamous cells, which line the mouth, tongue, gums, and lips. These are called squamous cell carcinomas (cancers). Not all tumors or growths in the mouth are cancer, however. Some are benign (not cancer), while others are precancerous, meaning they may become cancer but are not currently cancerous.
Causes and Risk Factors?
Mouth cancers form when cells on the lips or in the mouth develop changes (mutations) in their DNA. A cell’s DNA contains the instructions that tell a cell what to do. The mutation changes tell the cells to continue growing and dividing when healthy cells die. The accumulating abnormal mouth cancer cells can form a tumor. With time they may spread inside the mouth and onto other areas of the head and neck or other parts of the body.
Mouth cancers most commonly begin in the flat, thin cells (squamous cells) that line your lips and the inside of your mouth. Most oral cancers are squamous cell carcinomas.
It’s not clear what causes the mutations in squamous cells that lead to mouth cancer. However doctors have identified factors that may increase the risk of mouth cancer.
Risk factors
Factors that can increase your risk of mouth cancer include:
- Tobacco use of any kind, including cigarettes, cigars, pipes, chewing tobacco, and snuff, among others
- Heavy alcohol use
- Excessive sun exposure to your lips
- A sexually transmitted virus called human papillomavirus (HPV)
- A weakened immune system
What are the symptoms of Oral Cancer?
Signs and symptoms of mouth cancer may include:
- A lip or mouth sore that doesn’t heal
- A white or reddish patch on the inside of your mouth
- Loose teeth
- A growth or lump inside your mouth
- Mouth pain
- Ear pain
- Difficult or painful swallowing
Diagnosis
Tests and procedures used to diagnose mouth cancer include:
- Physical exam. Your doctor or dentist will examine your lips and mouth to look for abnormalities — areas of irritation, such as sores and white patches (leukoplakia).
- Removal of tissue for testing (biopsy). If a suspicious area is found, your doctor or dentist may remove a sample of cells for laboratory testing in a procedure called a biopsy. The doctor might use a cutting tool to cut away a sample of tissue or use a needle to remove a sample. In the laboratory, the cells are analyzed for cancer or precancerous changes that indicate a risk of future cancer.
Determining the extent of the cancer
Once mouth cancer is diagnosed, your doctor works to determine the extent (stage) of your cancer. Mouth cancer staging tests may include:
- Using a small camera to inspect your throat. During a procedure called endoscopy, your doctor may pass a small, flexible camera equipped with a light down your throat to look for signs that cancer has spread beyond your mouth.
- Imaging tests. A variety of imaging tests may help determine whether cancer has spread beyond your mouth. Imaging tests may include X-ray, CT, MRI, and positron emission tomography (PET) scans, among others. Not everyone needs each test. Your doctor will determine which tests are appropriate based on your condition.
Mouth cancer stages are indicated using the Roman numerals I through IV. A lower stage, such as stage I, indicates a smaller cancer confined to one area. A higher stage, such as stage IV, indicates a larger cancer, or that cancer has spread to other areas of the head or neck or to other areas of the body. Your cancer’s stage helps your doctor determine your treatment options.
Your treatment for oral cancer will be customized to your particular needs. One or more of the following therapies may be recommended to treat the cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Surgery
Surgery is the most frequent first treatment for oral cancer. The type of surgery depends on the type, extent, and stage of the cancer. Surgical techniques are designed to remove all of the cancer in the mouth, and if needed, lymph nodes confirmed or suspected to have cancer cells.
During oral cancer surgery, surgeons work closely with pathologists who use special techniques to examine the tissues and make sure the cancer is removed completely. If needed, plastic surgeons reconstruct the surgical site and help restore function.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy may be used after surgery, either alone or with chemotherapy for more advanced tumors. In rare cases, radiation therapy is used instead of surgery or as a first step in treatment. The method of radiation treatment used depends on the type and stage of cancer.
External-beam radiation therapy is the most frequently used method to deliver radiation therapy to the mouth. Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) and proton therapy are aimed at treating the tumor while minimizing damage to surrounding normal tissue.
Internal radiation or brachytherapy delivers radiation with tiny seeds, needles or tubes that are implanted into the tumor. It is used sometimes for treating small tumors or with surgery for advanced tumors.
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. For many patients, this results in a higher chance for successful treatment with less impact on the body.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy may be used to shrink the cancer before surgery or radiation, or it may be combined with radiation to increase the effectiveness of both treatments. It also may be used to shrink tumors that cannot be surgically removed.
Targeted Therapy
Cancer cells need specific molecules to survive, multiply, and spread. These molecules are usually made by the genes that cause cancer, as well as the cells themselves. Targeted therapies, such as epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor inhibitors, are designed to interfere with those molecules or the cancer-causing genes that create them.
Immunotherapy
Cancer cells need to evade the immune system to survive, multiply and spread. A new class of cancer medicines, immunotherapies, work to unmask the cancer to the immune system. These drugs are not currently a standard treatment option for oral cancer outside of a clinical trial, except for patients with unresectable or metastatic cancer.
Ovarian Cancer
The ovaries are a pair of organs in the female reproductive system. They are located in the pelvis, one on each side of the uterus (the hollow, pear-shaped organ where a fetus grows). Each ovary is about the size and shape of an almond and becomes smaller through atrophy after menopause occurs. The ovaries produce eggs and female hormones (chemicals that control the way certain cells or organs function).
Ovarian cancer forms in the tissues of the ovary or the fallopian tube. Most ovarian cancers are either ovarian epithelial carcinomas that begin in the cells from the fallopian tube or from the surface of the ovary. Cancers that arise from the peritoneal surface, called “peritoneal cancers,” are treated identically to ovarian cancer and fallopian tube cancer. Malignant germ cell tumors are a type of ovarian cancer that is much less common and begins in egg cells.
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for ovarian cancer can include:
- A family history of ovarian cancer: genetic risk can be transmitted between generations, either through maternal or paternal genetic inheritance. Known gene mutations that confer an increased risk of ovarian cancer and other cancers include BRCA gene mutations, Lynch syndrome genes, and other less common gene mutations.
- Hormone replacement therapy
- Late onset of menopause
- Infertility
- Nulliparity, or a woman who has had no children
What are the symptoms of Ovarian Cancer?
Most women with ovarian cancer have vague symptoms. These signs often are like less serious conditions including indigestion, weight gain, or aging.
Symptoms and signs of ovarian cancer vary from woman to woman, but they may include:
- General abdominal discomfort or pain (gas, indigestion, pressure, swelling, bloating, cramps)
- Bloating and/or a feeling of fullness, even after a light meal
- Nausea, diarrhea, constipation or frequent urination
- Unexplained weight loss or gain
- Loss of appetite
- Abnormal vaginal bleeding
- Unusual fatigue
- Back pain
- Pain during sex
- Menstrual changes
These symptoms do not always mean you have ovarian cancer, but it’s a good idea to discuss them with your healthcare provider if they:
- Are new symptoms
- last more than a few weeks
- Occur more than 12 times a month
How is Ovarian Cancer diagnosed?
Testing for Ovarian Cancer
If you have symptoms that may signal ovarian cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health and family medical history. One or more of the following tests for ovarian cancer may be used to find out if you have the disease and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Pelvic Exam
The doctor inserts one or two gloved fingers into the vagina and presses on the lower abdomen with the other hand. Usually, the doctor puts a finger in the vagina and rectum at the same time to feel deeper in the pelvis. A pelvic exam helps find out if there is a mass on either side of the uterus. This may be a sign of ovarian cancer.
Ovarian Cysts
In some other cases, a mass may be an ovarian cyst. Ovarian cysts are solid or fluid-filled pockets on the ovary and usually are not cancerous, although risk increases with age.
Blood Test for Ovarian Cancer
This blood test measures the level in your body of CA-125, a protein that is made by ovarian cancer cells. CA-125 is known as a tumor marker because its levels usually are higher in women with ovarian cancer. Testing CA-125 levels is most reliable when it is used to find cancer that has come back after treatment. Doctors look at how the levels of CA-125 have changed over time.
Measuring CA-125 levels also can be used:
- To see if treatment is working
- Predict if a treatment might be effective for ovarian and some other types of cancer
The CA-125 test alone cannot find ovarian cancer. A high level of CA-125 does not always mean you have ovarian cancer. Other conditions may raise the level of CA-125. Low levels of CA-125 do not mean you are cancer-free. Some types of ovarian cancer produce only low levels of CA-125 or none at all.
Ovarian Cancer Biopsy
The only way to find out for certain if a growth is ovarian cancer is for the doctor to remove cells from it and look at them under a microscope (biopsy). Tissue can be removed by:
- Surgery
- Laparoscopy
- Fine needle aspiration (FNA)
Ovarian Cancer Imaging
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
- Chest X-rays
- Transvaginal ultrasound: A wand-shaped scanner is put into the vagina. It has a small ultrasound device on the end.
Genetic Testing for Ovarian Cancer
If you are at high risk for ovarian cancer because of personal or family history, your doctor may ask you to have more tests, including some that give information about your genes. These tests may help you make important decisions about cancer prevention for yourself and your children. There are benefits and risks with genetic testing, which you should discuss with your doctor. Blood tests can find out if you have a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene, which can cause ovarian cancer as well as breast cancer. Others test for genes that play a part in Lynch syndrome, an inherited colon cancer syndrome.
Ovarian cancer treatment by stage
- If you are diagnosed with stage I or stage II ovarian cancer, removal of the cancerous tumor and diseased organs may be adequate treatment. During surgery, your doctor may perform biopsies to check for spread to your lymph nodes or surrounding tissues. Chemotherapy may be suggested for high-risk stage I patients, as well as stage II patients.
- If you are diagnosed with stage III or stage IV ovarian cancer, surgery may be performed before chemotherapy to remove the tumor, both ovaries and affected organs and lymph nodes throughout the body. After surgery, the majority of patients will start a personalized chemotherapy plan, including one or more chemotherapy drugs. Sometimes, once a diagnosis of ovarian cancer has been made by a biopsy, a few cycles of chemotherapy are given first to make surgery more successful and less complicated. Chemotherapy is then completed after surgery.
Surgery
Surgery is the main treatment for ovarian cancer, recommended primarily when the vast majority of the cancer or affected tissue can be removed successfully. Some early-stage ovarian patients may undergo minimally invasive procedures to remove ovarian tumors and/or preserve fertility. Other ovarian cancer surgical procedures may include:
- Removal of the uterus and the cervix (hysterectomy)
- Removal of the ovaries or fallopian tubes (unilateral or bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy)
- Taking a small sample of your pelvic, omentum, or abdominal lymph nodes or tissue (biopsy) to examine for cancerous cells under a microscope
- An incision in the abdomen to remove cancerous tissue, and if necessary, fluid from the abdominal region (laparotomy)
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy for ovarian cancer may be administered at any stage, but it is usually given at the later stages of the disease. In general, chemotherapy drugs are administered after surgery to eliminate remaining cancer cells, or to keep them from returning. However, there are times when chemotherapy will be given before surgery to make the tumor easier to remove. Throughout your treatment, your medical oncologist will work closely with your team of nurses, nutritionists, and social workers to minimize the toxicities and side effects of chemotherapy, maintain your quality of life, and optimize your results.
Radiation for Ovarian Cancer
Although radiation therapy rarely is used to treat ovarian cancer, it may help destroy any cancer cells that are left in the pelvic area. It also may be used if the cancer has come back after other treatments. In most cases, the main goal of radiation therapy is to control symptoms such as pain, not to treat the cancer.
Ovarian Cancer Targeted Therapy
A few cancer centers in the nation that can offer targeted therapy for some types of ovarian cancer. These new drugs stop the growth of cancer cells by interfering with certain proteins and receptors or blood vessels that supply the tumor with what it needs to grow.
Pancreatic Cancer
Pancreatic cancer occurs when cancer cells form and grow within the pancreas. These tumors are hard to diagnose early since pancreatic cancer signs and symptoms aren’t obvious. Because of this, the majority of these cancers are diagnosed after the disease has reached an advanced stage when treatment options are limited.
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for pancreatic cancer include:
- Pancreatic cysts
- Smoking
- Long-standing diabetes
- Chronic pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas, especially in people who smoke)
- Age (55+ years)
- Obesity
- Race (African-Americans are more likely to develop pancreatic cancer than white, Hispanic, or Asian Americans)
- Family history of pancreatic cancer
- Genetic factors; one or more inherited genetic mutations, including as part of the following familial cancer syndromes:
- Hereditary pancreatitis, multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 syndrome, hereditary breast-ovarian cancer (HBOC), hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC; Lynch syndrome), von Hippel-Lindau syndrome, ataxia-telangiectasia, and the familial atypical multiple mole melanoma syndromes (FAMMM).
What are the symptoms of Pancreatic Cancer?
The majority of symptoms arise because of the tumor’s location in the pancreas and the relationship of the pancreas to other organs:
- Jaundice (a painless yellowing of the skin and in the whites of the eyes)
- Dark yellow urine
- Pain in the upper or middle part of the abdomen and back
- Unexplained weight loss
- Loss of appetite
- Vomiting, diarrhea
- New development of diabetes
- Fatigue
- Light-colored stool and general itchiness
How is Pancreatic Cancer diagnosed?
Pancreatic cancer symptoms usually do not appear in the early stages. If they do they may be mistaken for signs of another condition. Additionally, the pancreas is deep inside the body, behind several other organs. This makes it difficult to feel or see without proper equipment. These factors mean pancreatic cancer is hard to diagnose.
Several diagnostic tests are usually required to find and stage (determine the extent of) pancreatic cancer. Accurate diagnosis and staging are important because they help your doctors choose the best type of treatment.
Diagnostic tests for pancreatic cancer
One or more of the following tests may be used to test for pancreatic cancer. These tests also may be used to find out if the cancer has spread and if treatment is working.
Imaging tests
One way to diagnose pancreatic cancer is by imaging the pancreas and surrounding areas. These tests can be used to uncover potential tumors, see if a tumor has spread and determine whether treatment is working. During some types of imaging tests, tissue samples for biopsy can be obtained if cancer is detected. Common imaging tests for pancreatic cancer include:
- CT scan: A painless, outpatient procedure that uses a series of X-rays taken from different angles to provide an image of the pancreas. Unless other factors make its use unsuitable, a CT scan optimized for imaging the pancreas is the primary option for diagnosis and staging of pancreatic cancer.
- MRI scan: A painless, outpatient procedure that uses magnets, rather than x-rays, to provide an image of the pancreas. While CT scans are more commonly used, an MRI can sometimes help visualize tumors that are hard to see.
- Endoscopic ultrasound: A special endoscope with an ultrasound probe is inserted into the mouth and directed to the first part of the small intestine to show the pancreas on a video screen. If cancer is suspected, a small piece of tissue can be taken for biopsy.
- Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP): A special endoscope is inserted through the mouth and directed to the first part of the small intestine. A smaller tube is then inserted through the endoscope into the bile ducts. A dye is injected through the tube, and an X-ray is taken. If cancer is suspected, a small piece of tissue can be taken for biopsy. If the ducts are blocked by a tumor, a stent may be inserted to relieve blockage. This may help alleviate stomach pain and digestive problems.
Biopsy
This is the removal of a small piece of tissue to view under a microscope to determine if there’s cancer. While imaging tests can indicate the presence of pancreatic cancer, a biopsy is almost always needed to confirm a diagnosis.
In most cases, biopsies are obtained during either an endoscopic ultrasound or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for localized pancreas cancer.
For patients with metastatic disease, a biopsy of the most accessible site is often preferred, such as a liver biopsy through CT-guided fine-needle aspiration.
Blood tests
Blood samples can be taken and examined for levels of substances that indicate the function of the liver, such as bilirubin, or other organs that may be affected by a pancreatic tumor. Blood samples may also be used to check the levels of tumor markers, such as CA-19-9. High levels of these markers may indicate the presence of pancreatic cancer. Levels can also be used to monitor treatment.
The main types of treatment for pancreatic cancer include:
- Surgery
- Chemotherapy
- Radiation therapy
Surgically removing the tumor is the main opportunity to cure a pancreatic tumor that has not spread to involve major blood vessels or to other organs, such as the liver.
Radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy may be used before or after surgery or instead of surgery if the cancer cannot be entirely removed.
You may find it helpful to think of the stages of pancreatic cancer in these treatment-related terms:
- Resectable: Surgery is the primary treatment, often with chemotherapy and/or radiation before or after surgery.
- Borderline resectable: Chemotherapy and/or radiation (and possibly targeted agents from a clinical trial) are followed by surgery, if possible.
- Unresectable: Chemotherapy and sometimes radiation (and possibly targeted agents from a clinical trial) are used without surgery.
- Metastatic: Chemotherapy (and possibly targeted agents from a clinical trial) is the main treatment.
Chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer
Chemotherapy uses cancer drugs to slow or shrink pancreatic tumors. These drugs are either given intravenously (IV) or taken by mouth and spread throughout the body through the bloodstream. Depending on the resectability (likelihood that the tumor can be completely removed by surgery) of the pancreatic cancer, chemotherapy can be given:
- Before surgery, try to reduce the size of the pancreatic tumor that needs to be removed. This is called neoadjuvant therapy.
- After surgery, to destroy any cancer that may not have been completely removed. This can reduce the chance that the cancer returns and is called adjuvant therapy.
- Along with radiation, which is called chemoradiation. This is sometimes used for localized pancreatic cancer.
There are many chemotherapy drugs used to treat pancreatic cancer, including:
- Gemcitabine
- Nab-paclitaxel
- 5-fluorouracil (F-5U)
- Irinotecan
- Oxaliplatin
- Capecitabine
- Cisplatin
- Docetaxel
- Liposomal Irinotecan
Based on the patient’s ability to tolerate therapy, two or more chemotherapy drugs are typically given in combination to treat patients.
Two chemotherapy combinations have been approved for the initial treatment of pancreatic cancer, including:
- Gemcitabine + nab-paclitaxel
- FOLFIRINOX (5-flurouracil, irinotecan and oxaliplatin)
Radiation for pancreatic cancer
Radiation therapy uses high-energy photon beams (x-rays) to slow or shrink pancreatic tumors. Due to the level of precision of some types of radiation therapy, higher than normal doses of radiation (dose-escalation) can be considered and used without damaging normal tissues.
Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT): Delivers radiation beams from several different angles using advanced imaging and computational techniques. Because of the extreme precision associated with this therapy, higher-than-normal doses of radiation (dose-escalation) can be used. This type of therapy is usually administered between 3-6 weeks and is sometimes given in addition to chemotherapy.
Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT): Delivers radiation beams of different intensities from several angles. Because of the extreme precision associated with this therapy, large doses can be given every day, and higher-than-normal doses of radiation (dose escalation) can be considered if needed. Treatment usually lasts less than a week.
3D conformal radiation therapy: The traditional method that uses three-dimensional scans to image the tumor before delivering radiation beams. This type of therapy is usually administered for about 2-6 weeks.
Proton therapy: Delivers proton beams, rather than photon beams. In some situations, protons cause less radiation exposure to surrounding tissue than photons. This type of therapy may be used for pancreatic cancer patients whose disease has recurred in the same area, despite prior radiation therapy.
Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer is a disease in which cancer forms in the tissues of the prostate, a male gland just below the bladder, and in front of the rectum. Prostate cancer is rare in men younger than 50 years of age, and the chance of developing prostate cancer increases as men get older.
Anything that increases your chance of getting prostate cancer is a risk factor. These include:
- Age: This is the most important risk factor. Most men who develop prostate cancer are older than 50. About two of every three prostate cancers are diagnosed in men older than 65.
- Family history: Risk is higher when other members of your family (especially father, brother, son) have or have prostate cancer, especially if they were young when they developed it.
- Race: African-American men have nearly double the risk of prostate cancer as white men. It is found less often in Asian American, Hispanic, and American Indian men.
- Diet: A high-fat diet, particularly a diet high in animal fats, may increase risk; diets high in fruits and vegetables may decrease risk.
- Nationality: Prostate cancer is more prevalent in North America and northwestern Europe than in other parts of the world.
- Some research suggests that inflammation of the prostate (prostatitis) may play a role in prostate cancer. Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are being investigated as possible risk factors as well.
Symptoms may not appear during the early stages of prostate cancer, and most symptoms of prostate cancer vary from person to person. Having these symptoms does not mean you have prostate cancer.
Common prostate cancer signs and symptoms may include:
- Weak or interrupted (“stop-and-go”) urine flow
- Sudden or frequent urge to urinate
- Trouble urinating or starting the flow of urine
- Trouble emptying the bladder completely
- Trouble holding back urination
- Pain or burning urination
- Blood in the urine or semen
- Pain in the back, hips, or pelvis that doesn’t go away
- Shortness of breath, feeling very tired, an accelerated heartbeat, dizziness, or pale skin caused by anemia
- Difficulty having an erection
Some of the symptoms listed above may occur with a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). BPH occurs when the prostate enlarges and interferes with urine flow or sexual function. BPH is not cancer, but surgery may be needed to correct it. The symptoms of BPH or other problems in the prostate mimic the symptoms of prostate cancer.
How is Prostate Cancer diagnosed?
To diagnose prostate cancer, or to see if the cancer has spread, these tests may be performed:
- Digital rectal exam (DRE)
- A prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test that measures the level of PSA in the blood
- Rectal ultrasound
- Biopsy
- MRI
- Transrectal Ultrasound
The main types of treatment for pancreatic cancer include:
- Treatment for low-risk prostate cancer is often active surveillance. Surgery may be performed to remove a portion of the prostate. Radiation may be suggested for early-stage patients, as surgery and radiation produce similar outcomes.
- Treatment for intermediate-risk prostate cancer generally includes hormone therapy (androgen deprivation) combined with surgery to remove a portion of or the entire prostate, and possibly radiation.
- Treatment for high-risk prostate cancer often includes an emphasis on clinical trials. Hormone therapy and radiation will likely be introduced to the plan, as well. A prostatectomy may be performed, along with removal of affected tissue or lymph nodes.
- Metastatic prostate cancer treatment often includes immunotherapy and hormone therapies.
- Chemotherapy may be introduced if these therapies aren’t successful. Radiation may be suggested at this stage of the disease to ease pain or symptoms.
- For prostate cancer patients with recurrent prostate cancer, surgery will include prostatectomy and radiation. Hormone therapy is occasionally suggested for recurrent cases, as well.
Radiation Therapy
Radiation often is used to treat prostate cancer that is contained within the prostate or the surrounding area. For early-stage disease, patients often have a choice between surgery and radiation with similar outcomes. For larger or more aggressive tumors, radiation therapy may be used in combination with hormone therapy. Radiation also may be used to treat prostate cancer tumors that are not completely removed or that come back after surgery.
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. For many patients, this results in better cancer control with fewer side effects.
Hormone Therapy
The majority of prostate cancers are hormone-sensitive, which means male hormones (androgens) such as testosterone fuel the growth of the cancer. About one-third of prostate cancer patients require hormone therapy (also called androgen deprivation), which blocks testosterone production or blocks testosterone from interacting with the tumor cells. This reduces the tumor size or makes it grow more slowly. While hormone therapy may help control prostate cancer, it does not cure it.
Gene Therapy
It is important to examine each prostate cancer tumor carefully to determine gene-expression profiles. Ongoing research will help us determine the most effective and least invasive treatment targeted to specific cancers. This personalized medicine approach sets us above and beyond most cancer centers and allows us to attack the specific causes of each cancer for the best outcome.
Cryotherapy
The tumor is frozen with a long, thin probe inserted into the tumor. Intensive follow-up with X-rays or other imaging procedures is required to ensure that the tumor has been destroyed.
Targeted Therapies
Chemotherapy
- Taxotere® (docetaxel) is one of the standard chemotherapy agents for adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
- Cisplatin-based chemotherapy is used to treat the small-cell variant of prostate cancer.
Rectal Cancer
Rectal cancer forms in the tissues of the rectum, which is the last several inches of the large intestine before the anus (the opening of the large intestine to the outside of the body). Most of the large intestine is called the colon.
Rectal cancer usually develops over years, starting with precancerous growths called polyps. Some polyps grow to penetrate the wall of the rectum.
Different types of cancer can develop in the rectum. Most rectal cancers are adenocarcinomas, which are cancers from glandular tissue. Other cancer types that can occur in the rectum include carcinoid tumors, small cell carcinomas, and gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST).
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting rectal cancer is a risk factor. Rectal cancer risk factors include:
- Age: Rectal cancer is found most often in people over 50 years old.
- Family history of colorectal cancer or polyps
- Inherited disorders such as hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC or Lynch) syndrome or familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
- Race or ethnic background: African Americans and Jews of Eastern European descent (Ashkenazi Jews) are at higher risk.
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease or chronic ulcerative colitis)
- Colorectal cancer or polyps
- Obesity
- Lack of exercise
- Eating a lot of red meat, processed meats or meats cooked at very high heat
- Diabetes Type 2
- Cigarette smoking
- Drinking too much alcohol
Not everyone with risk factors gets rectal cancer. However, if you have risk factors, discussing them with your doctor is a good idea. If you are concerned about inherited family syndromes that may cause rectal cancer.
What are the symptoms of Rectal Cancer?
Rectal cancer often does not have symptoms in the early stages. When it does have symptoms, they vary from person to person. Most rectal cancers begin as polyps, small non-cancerous growths on the rectum wall that can grow larger and become cancer.
Rectal cancer symptoms may include:
- Rectal bleeding
- Blood in the stool or toilet after a bowel movement
- Diarrhea or constipation that does not go away
- A change in the size or shape of your stool
- Discomfort or urge to have a bowel movement when there is no need
- Abdominal pain or a cramping pain in your lower stomach
- Bloating or full feeling
- Change in appetite
- Weight loss without dieting
- Fatigue
These symptoms do not always mean you have rectal cancer. But if you notice one or more of these signs for more than two weeks, see your doctor.
How is Rectal Cancer diagnosed?
Rectal Cancer Diagnosis
If you have symptoms that may signal rectal cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health; your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits; and your family medical history. One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have rectal cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Digital rectal exam: The doctor inserts a gloved finger into the rectum to feel for polyps or other problems.
Fecal occult blood test (FOBT): This take-home test looks for blood in stool. A stool sample is examined for traces of blood not visible to the naked eye.
Fecal immunochemical test (FIT): This take-home test detects blood proteins in stool.
Endoscopic tests, which may include:
- Proctoscopy: A thin, tube-like instrument (proctoscope) is inserted into the rectum. This lets the doctor view the rectum. Suspicious tissue or polyps can be biopsied (removed) for examination.
- Sigmoidoscopy: Flexible plastic tubing with a camera on the end (sigmoidoscope) is inserted into the rectum. This gives the doctor a view of the rectum and lower colon. Suspicious tissue or polyps can be biopsied (removed) for examination. The tumor can be marked to help the doctor do minimally invasive surgery. Also called flexible sigmoidoscopy or flex-sig.
- Colonoscopy: A colonoscope is a longer version of a sigmoidoscope. Doctors use it to look at the entire colon.
- Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS): An endoscope is inserted into the body. A probe at the end of the endoscope bounces high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) off internal organs to make a picture (sonogram). Also called endosonography.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed tomography) scan
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scan
- PET/CT (positron emission tomography) scan
- Virtual colonoscopy or CT (computed tomography) colonoscopy: A scope is not put into the rectum, and you do not have to be sedated.
- Double-contrast barium enema (DCBE): Barium is a chemical that allows the bowel lining to show up on X-ray. A barium solution is given by enema. Then a series of X-rays are taken.
Blood test for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA): This blood test looks for CEA, a tumor marker made by most rectal cancers. It also can be used to measure tumor growth or find out if cancer has come back after treatment.
Surgery is the most common treatment for rectal cancer that has not spread to distant sites. Rectal cancer surgery is most successful when done by a specialist with a great deal of experience in the procedure.
Rectal cancer may be treated with surgery alone or surgery combined with radiation, chemotherapy, and/or other treatments. Chemotherapy or radiation may be given:
- Surgery
- Chemotherapy
- Radiation therapy
Surgically removing the tumor is the main opportunity to cure a pancreatic tumor that has not spread to involve major blood vessels or to other organs, such as the liver.
Radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy may be used before or after surgery or instead of surgery if the cancer cannot be entirely removed.
You may find it helpful to think of the stages of pancreatic cancer in these treatment-related terms:
- Before surgery to improve the effectiveness of surgery with less impact on your body. This is called neoadjuvant therapy.
- After surgery to help keep you cancer-free. This is called adjuvant therapy.
The type of surgical method used to treat rectal cancer depends on the stage and location of the tumor. Your doctor may recommend one of the following:>
- Polypectomy: Suspicious or cancerous polyps on the inside surface of the rectum usually can be removed during a colonoscopy. A colonoscope, which is a long tube with a camera in the end, is inserted into the rectum. The doctor guides it to the area needing treatment. A tiny, scissor-like tool or wire loop removes the polyp.
- Local excision: If rectal cancer tumors are small and have not grown into the wall of the rectum, they sometimes may be removed through the anus.
- Proctectomy (rectal resection): The area of the rectum where the cancer is located, along with some healthy surrounding tissue around the rectum, is removed. Nearby lymph nodes are removed (biopsied) and looked at under a microscope.
Depending on where the tumor is, the colon may be reconnected to the rectum or anus. This is called sphincter-preserving surgery. If the tumor is too low within the rectum or anus, a colostomy may be needed.
In a colostomy, a stoma (hole) is cut in the abdomen wall into the colon. Body waste goes through the stoma into colostomy, which is a plastic bag outside the body. Sometimes, a temporary ileostomy may be used to allow the reconnection of the bowel to heal after surgery.
Surgery may be done by:
- Traditional open surgery
- Minimally invasive surgery
Your doctor will decide which method is best for you.
During minimally invasive surgery, small cuts are made in the abdomen. A tiny camera and surgical instruments are inserted. The surgeon uses video imaging to perform the surgery just as would be done with open surgery. Minimally invasive surgery sometimes is done with the surgical robot Minimally invasive surgeries for rectal cancer include endoscopic mucosal resection and endoluminal stent placement.
Pelvic exenteration: If rectal cancer has spread into other organs, such as the colon, bladder, prostate, or female reproductive organs, those organs may be removed during surgery. Often a colostomy may be needed for the elimination of bodily waste. Even with extensive resection, expert surgeons sometimes can perform sphincter-preserving surgery to avoid a colostomy.
Chemotherapy
Targeted Therapies
Your doctor may offer novel therapies for certain types of rectal cancer. These innovative new drugs stop the growth of cancer cells by interfering with certain proteins and receptors or blood vessels that supply the tumor with what it needs to grow, survive, and spread.
Radiation Therapy
The most advanced radiation treatments for rectal cancer includes:
Brachytherapy: Tiny radioactive seeds are placed in the body close to the tumor 3D-conformal radiation therapy: Several radiation beams are given in the exact shape of the tumor Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT): Treatment is tailored to the specific shape of the tumor to reduce damage to normal tissue.
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly into the tumor, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. For many patients, this results in better cancer control with fewer side effects.
Skin Non Melanoma
Skin cancer is a disease that begins in the cells of the skin. The area of skin with the cancer is often called a lesion. There are several types of skin cancer (carcinoma). Melanoma is the most serious. But there are others that are known as nonmelanoma skin cancer. These include:
- Basal cell carcinoma
- Squamous cell carcinoma
- Merkel cell carcinoma
- Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma
- Kaposi sarcoma
Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma are by far the most common.
Causes and Risk Factor
Anything that increases your chance of getting a disease is called a risk factor. Having a risk factor does not mean that you will get cancer; not having risk factors doesn’t mean that you will not get cancer. Talk with your doctor if you think you may be at risk.
Risk factors for basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin include the following:
- Being exposed to natural sunlight or artificial sunlight (such as from tanning beds) over long periods of time.
- Having a fair complexion, which includes the following:
- Fair skin that freckles and burns easily, does not tan, or tans poorly.
- Blue, green, or other light-colored eyes.
- Red or blond hair.
Although having a fair complexion is a risk factor for skin cancer, people of all skin colors can get skin cancer.
- Having a history of sunburns.
- Having a personal or family history of basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, actinic keratosis, familial dysplastic nevus syndrome, or unusual moles.
- Having certain changes in the genes or hereditary syndromes, such as basal cell nevus syndrome, that are linked to skin cancer.
- Having skin inflammation that has lasted for long periods of time.
- Having a weakened immune system.
- Being exposed to arsenic.
- Past treatment with radiation.
Older age is the main risk factor for most cancers. The chance of getting cancer increases as you get older.
Not all changes in the skin are a sign of basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, or actinic keratosis. Check with your doctor if you notice any changes in your skin.
Signs of basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin include the following:
- A sore that does not heal.
- Areas of the skin that are:
- Raised, smooth, shiny, and look pearly.
- Firm and look like a scar, and may be white, yellow, or waxy.
- Raised and red or reddish-brown.
- Scaly, bleeding, or crusty.
Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin occur most often in areas of the skin exposed to the sun, such as the nose, ears, lower lip, or top of the hands.
Signs of actinic keratosis include the following:
- A rough, red, pink, or brown, scaly patch on the skin that may be flat or raised.
- Cracking or peeling of the lower lip that is not helped by lip balm or petroleum jelly.
Actinic keratosis occurs most commonly on the face or the top of the hands.
What are the symptoms of Skin Non Melanoma?
Non-melanoma skin cancer usually starts as an abnormal area or change on any part of the skin. How non-melanoma skin cancer looks often depends on the type of cancer. Other health conditions can also look like non-melanoma skin cancer. See your doctor if you have any changes on your skin.
The following are common signs and symptoms of basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), the most common types of non-melanoma skin cancer.
Basal cell carcinoma usually develops on areas of skin exposed to the sun, especially the head, face and neck. It can also develop on the central part of the body (trunk). BCC may appear on the skin as:
Basal cell carcinoma usually develops on areas of skin exposed to the sun, especially the head, face and neck. It can also develop on the central part of the body (trunk). BCC may appear on the skin as:
- a sore that doesn’t heal or comes back after healing
- pale white or yellow flat areas that look like scars
- raised and scaly red patches
- small, smooth and shiny lumps that are pearly white, pink or red
- a pink growth with raised edges and indents in the centre
- a growth that has small blood vessels on the surface
- a sore that bleeds
- a growth or area that is itchy
Squamous cell carcinoma usually develops on areas of skin exposed to the sun, but it can also be found on the skin around the genitals and anus. It can occur on the skin of scars, sores, ulcers and burns. SCC may appear on the skin as:
- a sore that doesn’t heal or comes back after healing
- rough or scaly red patches with irregular borders
- raised lumps that indent in the centre
- a growth that looks like a wart
- a sore that is crusty or bleeds easily
- a growth or area that is itchy, irritated or sore
How is Skin Non Melanoma diagnosed?
The following procedures may be used:
- Physical exam and history : An exam of the body to check general signs of health, including checking for signs of disease, such as lumps or anything else that seems unusual. A history of the patient’s health habits and past illnesses and treatments will also be taken.
- Skin exam: An exam of the skin for bumps or spots that look abnormal in color, size, shape, or texture.
- Skin biopsy : All or part of the abnormal-looking growth is cut from the skin and viewed under a microscope by a pathologist to check for signs of cancer. There are four main types of skin biopsies:
- Shave biopsy : A sterile razor blade is used to “shave-off” the abnormal-looking growth.
- Punch biopsy : A special instrument called a punch or a trephine is used to remove a circle of tissue from the abnormal-looking growth.
- Punch biopsy. A hollow, circular scalpel is used to cut into a lesion on the skin. The instrument is turned clockwise and counterclockwise to cut down about 4 millimeters (mm) to the layer of fatty tissue below the dermis. A small sample of tissue is removed to be checked under a microscope. Skin thickness is different on different parts of the body.
- Incisional biopsy : A scalpel is used to remove part of a growth.
- Excisional biopsy : A scalpel is used to remove the entire growth.
The following tests and procedures may be used in the staging process for squamous cell carcinoma of the skin:
- CT scan (CAT scan): A procedure that makes a series of detailed pictures of areas inside the body, such as the head, neck, and chest, taken from different angles. The pictures are made by a computer linked to an x-ray machine. A dye may be injected into a vein or swallowed to help the organs or tissues show up more clearly. This procedure is also called computed tomography, computerized tomography, or computerized axial tomography.
- Chest x-ray : An x-ray of the organs and bones inside the chest. An x-ray is a type of energy beam that can go through the body and onto film, making a picture of areas inside the body.
- PET scan (positron emission tomography scan): A procedure to find malignant tumor cells in the body. A small amount of radioactive glucose (sugar) is injected into a vein. The PET scanner rotates around the body and makes a picture of where glucose is being used in the body. Malignant tumor cells show up brighter in the picture because they are more active and take up more glucose than normal cells do. Sometimes a PET scan and CT scan are done at the same time.
- Ultrasound exam: A procedure in which high-energy sound waves (ultrasound) are bounced off internal tissues, such as lymph nodes, or organs and make echoes. The echoes form a picture of body tissues called a sonogram. The picture can be printed to be looked at later. An ultrasound exam of the regional lymph nodes may be done for basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.
- Eye exam with dilated pupil : An exam of the eye in which the pupil is dilated (opened wider) with medicated eye drops to allow the doctor to look through the lens and pupil to the retina and optic nerve. The inside of the eye, including the retina and the optic nerve, is examined with a light.
- Lymph node biopsy : The removal of all or part of a lymph node. A pathologist views the lymph node tissue under a microscope to check for cancer cells. A lymph node biopsy may be done for squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.
There are different types of treatment for patients with basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, and actinic keratosis.
Eight types of standard treatment are used:
1. Surgery – One or more of the following surgical procedures may be used to treat basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, or actinic keratosis .Simple excision: The tumor, along with some of the normal tissue around it, is cut from the skin.
2. Radiation therapy – Radiation therapy is a cancer treatment that uses high-energy x-rays or other types of radiation to kill cancer cells or keep them from growing. There are two types of radiation therapy:
- External radiation therapy uses a machine outside the body to send radiation toward the cancer.
- Internal radiation therapy uses a radioactive substance sealed in needles, seeds, wires, or catheters that are placed directly into or near the cancer.
The way the radiation therapy is given depends on the type of cancer being treated. External radiation therapy is used to treat basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin.
3. Chemotherapy – Chemotherapy is a cancer treatment that uses drugs to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping them from dividing. When chemotherapy is taken by mouth or injected into a vein or muscle, the drugs enter the bloodstream and can reach cancer cells throughout the body (systemic chemotherapy). When chemotherapy is placed directly into the cerebrospinal fluid, an organ, or a body cavity such as the abdomen, the drugs mainly affect cancer cells in those areas (regional chemotherapy).
Chemotherapy for basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, and actinic keratosis is usually topical (applied to the skin in a cream or lotion). The way the chemotherapy is given depends on the condition being treated. Topical fluorouracil (5-FU) is used to treat basal cell carcinoma.
4. Photodynamic therapy – Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a cancer treatment that uses a drug and a certain type of laser light to kill cancer cells. A drug that is not active until it is exposed to light is injected into a vein or put on the skin. The drug collects more in cancer cells than in normal cells. For skin cancer, laser light is shined onto the skin and the drug becomes active and kills the cancer cells. Photodynamic therapy causes little damage to healthy tissue.
5. Immunotherapy – Immunotherapy is a treatment that uses the patient’s immune system to fight cancer. Substances made by the body or made in a laboratory are used to boost, direct, or restore the body’s natural defenses against cancer. This type of cancer treatment is also called biotherapy or biologic therapy. Interferon and imiquimod are immunotherapy drugs used to treat skin cancer. Interferon (by injection) may be used to treat squamous cell carcinoma of the skin. Topical imiquimod therapy (a cream applied to the skin) may be used to treat some basal cell carcinomas.
6. Targeted therapy – Targeted therapy is a type of treatment that uses drugs or other substances to attack cancer cells. Targeted therapies usually cause less harm to normal cells than chemotherapy or radiation therapy do.
Targeted therapy with a signal transduction inhibitor is used to treat basal cell carcinoma. Signal transduction inhibitors block signals that are passed from one molecule to another inside a cell. Blocking these signals may kill cancer cells. Vismodegib and sonidegib are signal transduction inhibitors used to treat basal cell carcinoma.
7. Chemical peel – A chemical peel is a procedure used to improve the way certain skin conditions look. A chemical solution is put on the skin to dissolve the top layers of skin cells. Chemical peels may be used to treat actinic keratosis. This type of treatment is also called chemabrasion and chemexfoliation.
Other drug therapy – Retinoids (drugs related to vitamin A) are sometimes used to treat squamous cell carcinoma of the skin. Diclofenac and ingenol are topical drugs used to treat actinic keratosis.
Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Soft tissue sarcomas are a group of cancers that typically develop in the soft tissues surrounding, connecting, or supporting the body’s structures and organs. These tissues include muscles, joints, tendons, fat, blood vessels, nerves, and tissues.
Some soft-tissue tumors, such as lipomas and hemangiomas, are benign (not cancer). Others are malignant (cancer) and are called soft tissue sarcomas. There are more than 30 types of sarcoma, making each extremely rare. Sarcomas are classified that have similar types of cancer cells and symptoms. They usually are named for the type of tissue where they start. Sarcomas within a classification often are treated the same way.
The main types of soft-tissue sarcoma begin in:
- Muscle tissue
- Peripheral nerve tissue
- Joint tissue
- Blood and lymph vessels
- Fibrous tissue
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting cancer is a risk factor. For sarcoma, risk factors include:
Inherited genetic conditions such as:
- Von Recklinghausen disease
- Li-Fraumeni syndrome
- Gardner syndrome
- Inherited retinoblastoma
- Werner syndrome
- Gorlin syndrome
- Tuberous sclerosis
Other risk factors include:
- Damage or removal of lymph nodes during previous cancer treatments.
- Exposure to vinyl chloride, a chemical used in making plastics.
- Previous radiation treatment for another cancer.
Not everyone with risk factors gets sarcoma. However, if you have risk factors, discussing them with your healthcare provider is a good idea.
What are the symptoms of Soft Tissue Sarcoma?
Signs of sarcoma vary from person to person. Many times sarcoma does not have symptoms in the early stages. Only about half of soft-tissue sarcomas are found in the early stages before they spread.
The location of the sarcoma makes a difference in the symptoms. For instance, if they start:
- On the arms or legs, you may notice a lump that grows over weeks to months. It may hurt, but it usually doesn’t.
- In the retroperitoneum (the back wall inside the abdomen), they may cause problems that have symptoms, such as pain. Tumors may cause blockage or bleeding of the stomach or bowels. They may grow large enough for the tumor to be felt in the abdomen.
If you have any of the following problems, talk to your doctor:
- A new lump or a lump that is growing anywhere on your body
- Abdominal pain that is getting worse
- Blood in your stool or vomit
- Black, tarry stools (this may mean there is internal bleeding)
These symptoms do not always mean you have sarcoma. However, it is important to discuss any symptoms with your doctor, since they may also signal other health problems.
How is Soft Tissue Sarcoma diagnosed?
Sarcoma Diagnostic Tests
The only way to be certain a tumor is sarcoma is a biopsy (removing a small number of cells to examine under a microscope). Imaging tests may be used before or after biopsy to determine the location and extent of the tumor.
Biopsy
The doctor will choose one of the following types of biopsy depending on where the tumor is.
Fine needle aspiration (FNA): A very small needle is placed into the tumor and suction is applied. CT (computed tomography) scans may be used to help guide the needle. Doctors trained to read these types of biopsies then review the small numbers of cells that are drawn into the needle. If the test shows that the tumor may be a sarcoma, another type of biopsy probably will be done to remove a larger piece of tissue.
Core needle: The doctor uses a needle slightly larger than the one used in an FNA biopsy to remove a cylindrical sample of tissue.
Incisional: An incision (cut) is made in the skin and a small part of tumor is removed
Excisional: An incision (cut) is made in the skin and the entire growth is removed surgically
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography)
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
- Chest X-ray
- Ultrasound
TSarcomas usually are treated with a combination of therapies that may include surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. If you are diagnosed with sarcoma, your doctor will discuss the best options to treat it. This depends on several factors, including:
- The location and type of sarcoma
- If the cancer has spread
- Possible impact on your body
- Your general health
Your treatment for sarcoma will be customized to your particular needs. It may include one or more of the following.
Surgery
Like all surgeries, sarcoma surgery is most successful when performed by a specialist with a great deal of experience in the particular procedure.
Surgery is the main treatment for soft-tissue sarcomas. The surgeon removes the tumor, as well as a margin of healthy tissue around it to take out as many cancer cells as possible. You may receive chemotherapy or radiation therapy before or after the surgery.
Because of a special type of surgery called limb-sparing surgery, which often is followed by radiation therapy, most patients do not have to have arms or legs removed to treat sarcoma.
Chemotherapy
the most up-to-date and advanced chemotherapy options now available which may be used as the main treatment for sarcoma or with surgery or radiation. A combination of two or more chemotherapy drugs may be used. Sometimes limb profusion, a special way to give a more focused dose of chemotherapy may be used.
Radiation Therapy
New radiation therapy techniques and remarkably skilled doctors to target tumors more precisely, delivering the maximum amount of radiation with the least damage to healthy cells.
Radiation therapy usually is not used as the main treatment for sarcoma, but it may be used before surgery to shrink the tumor or after surgery to destroy the remaining cancer cells. If you cannot have surgery, you may receive radiation therapy to help with pain and other symptoms. the most advanced radiation treatments are available which include:
- Brachytherapy: Tiny radioactive seeds are placed in the body close to the tumor
- 3D-conformal radiation therapy: Several radiation beams are given in the exact shape of the tumor
- Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT): Treatment is tailored to the specific shape of the tumor
Proton Therapy
Proton therapy delivers high radiation doses directly to the tumor site, sparing nearby healthy tissue and vital organs. For some patients, this therapy results in better cancer control with less impact on the body.
Stomach Cancer
Stomach (gastric) cancer forms in the stomach, beginning in the cells, which are the building blocks that makeup tissues of the stomach and other organs of the body. Stomach cancer begins in the lining of the mucosal (innermost) layer of the stomach and spreads through the stomach wall as it grows, often forming a mass called a tumor. The tumor can grow into nearby organs, such as the liver or esophagus. The cancerous cells can spread through blood or lymph vessels to other tissues in the body.
Stomach cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in the world. It is a challenging condition to treat since patients usually aren’t diagnosed until the cancer has advanced to the point where it causes symptoms.
Causes and Risk Factors
No one knows the exact causes of stomach cancer, but risk factors can include: Having any of the following medical conditions:
- Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection of the stomach
- Atrophic gastritis (chronic inflammation of the stomach)
- Pernicious anemia
- Intestinal metaplasia (a condition in which the normal stomach lining is replaced with the cells that line the intestines)
- Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) or gastric polyps
- Eating a diet high in salted, smoked foods, and low in fruits and vegetables
- Eating foods that have not been prepared or stored properly
- Being older or male
- Smoking
- Having a mother, father, sister, or brother who has had stomach cancer
What are the symptoms of Stomach Cancer?
Stomach cancer often does not have symptoms in the early stages. When signs do appear, they may be mistaken for less serious problems such as indigestion or heartburn. This means stomach cancer often is not found until it spreads.
Stomach cancer symptoms may include:
- Abdominal pain or discomfort
- Loss of appetite
- Heartburn, indigestion or ulcer-type symptoms
- Nausea and vomiting
- Bloating or swelling in the abdomen
- Diarrhea or constipation
- Feeling of fullness after eating small amounts of food
- Bloody or black stools
- Fatigue
- Unintentional weight loss
If you have any of the following problems, talk to your doctor:
- A new lump or a lump that is growing anywhere on your body
- Abdominal pain that is getting worse
- Blood in your stool or vomit
- Black, tarry stools (this may mean there is internal bleeding)
These symptoms do not always mean you have stomach cancer. However, if you notice any of them for over two weeks, talk to your doctor. Even if they are not signs of cancer, they may signal other health problems.
How is Stomach Cancer diagnosed?
Initial diagnosis
Your doctor will likely conduct or review these tests:
Physical exam and history: Your doctor examines your body to check general signs of health, including checking for signs of disease, such as lumps and swollen lymph nodes.
Blood chemistry studies: Your doctor takes a blood sample to check the amounts of certain substances released into the blood by organs and tissues in the body.
Complete blood count (CBC): Your doctor takes a sample of blood to check for:
- The number of red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets.
- The amount of hemoglobin (the protein that carries oxygen) in the red blood cells.
- The portion of the sample is made up of red blood cells.
Fecal occult blood test: This test checks your stool for blood that can be seen only with a microscope.
Barium swallow: For this series of X-rays of the stomach, you drink a liquid that contains barium (a silver-white metallic compound). The liquid coats your stomach, and X-rays of it. This procedure is also called an upper GI series.
Endoscopy: Your doctor uses an endoscope (a thin tube) to look inside your stomach. You may receive medications to help you relax during the procedure.
Biopsy: Using an endoscope with a tool for removing cells or tissues, your doctor takes a small sample that your pathologist will later view under a microscope.
CT scan (CAT scan): Your doctor takes detailed pictures of areas inside your body from different angles. The pictures are made by a computer linked to an X-ray machine. You may have dye injected into a vein or you may swallow it to help the organs or tissues show up more clearly. This procedure is also called computed tomography, computerized tomography, or computerized axial tomography.
Stomach Cancer Surgery
Surgery is the most common treatment for stomach cancer, many times with chemotherapy and radiation. If all three therapies are needed, the standard approach is to give chemotherapy and radiation before surgery. This method usually is more successful and better tolerated.
Surgical techniques for stomach cancer may include:
Endoscopic mucosal resection: An endoscope is inserted down the throat and into the stomach, allowing doctors to remove certain types of early, non-invasive stomach cancers.
Subtotal (partial) gastrectomy: The cancerous part of the stomach, nearby lymph nodes (tissues that filter infection and disease), and parts of other organs near the tumor are surgically removed.
Total gastrectomy: The entire stomach, nearby lymph nodes and sometimes the spleen, parts of the esophagus, intestines, pancreas, and other organs where the cancer has spread, are removed. The esophagus is reconnected to the small intestine you can continue to eat and swallow.
During the surgery, the surgeon forms a new “stomach” from part of the intestine. After surgery, you may:
- Have a feeding tube that goes directly into your small intestine to be sure you receive needed nutrients
- Need to eat smaller, more frequent meals and avoid sugar
- Have abdominal discomfort and diarrhea
- Need to take vitamin supplements as pills or shots (injections)
If a stomach cancer tumor is blocking the stomach but cannot be removed completely, surgery may be done to help you eat normally. Procedures include:
- Endoluminal stent placement: A thin, expandable tube is placed between the stomach and esophagus or small intestine to keep the passageway open.
- Endoluminal laser therapy: An endoscope with a laser is inserted into the body. The laser cuts the tumor.
Stomach cancer chemotherapy
chemotherapy for stomach cancer often is given before surgery to shrink the tumor
Stomach cancer radiation therapy
The most precise methods of radiation therapy, target the stomach cancer while limiting damage to surrounding areas.
Stomach cancer targeted therapies
Targeted therapies are specially designed to treat stomach cancer’s specific genetic and molecular profile to help your body fight the disease.
Stomach cancer gene therapy
Gene therapy is a personalized medicine approach that sets us above and beyond most cancer centers and allows us to attack the specific causes of each stomach cancer.
Testicular Cancer
Testicular cancer is a disease in which cancer grows in one or both testicles. The testicles are two egg-shaped glands that produce testosterone (male hormone) and sperm. The testicles are located below the penis inside a sac of loose skin called the scrotum.
Causes and Risk Factors
Risk factors for testicular cancer include:
- Having family members with testicular cancer
- Abnormal development of the testicles
- History of undescended testicle
- Being white
- Exposure to certain chemicals in the environment, such as polyvinylchloride and phthalates
What are the symptoms of Testicular Cancer?
- A lump or enlargement in either testicle
- A feeling of heaviness in the scrotum
- A dull ache in the abdomen or groin
- A sudden collection of fluid in the scrotum
- Pain or discomfort in a testicle or the scrotum
- Enlargement or tenderness of the breasts
- Back pain
How is Testicular Cancer diagnosed?
Urology
If your blood test is positive for testicular cancer tumor markers, or if your ultrasound reveals a cancerous-appearing lump in your testicle, you will be referred to a specialist called a urologist. Urologists are surgeons who focus on the urinary tracts of males and females, and on the reproductive system of males, including problems with the testicles. For patients with testicular cancer, a urologist will perform the surgery to remove the tumor.
Diagnostic surgery
Unlike other cancers for which a biopsy (the removal of a sample of cells for examination) is performed when testicular cancer is suspected the entire testicle is removed in a procedure called an orchiectomy through an incision in the groin and pulling the testicle up from the scrotum. A biopsy through the scrotum for testicular cancer runs the risk of spreading the cancer and can complicate future treatment options. Removing the entire testicle out of the scrotum is the only safe way to diagnose testicular cancer. Only the cancer-containing testicle is removed, and it is important to do so promptly. The urology team will make this a priority for you. If there is any uncertainty, the urologists can examine the testicle by pulling the testicle out of the scrotum; if a condition other than testis cancer is found, the testicle is placed back into the scrotum.
This may sound frightening, but recovery is quick. And do not worry — the remaining testicle can do the work of two. Please understand that removal of the testicle will not make you sterile (unable to have children) and does not take away your ability to enjoy sexual activity or have an erection.
Pathology
The removed testicle will be sent to a pathology laboratory for a thorough examination under a microscope. A pathologist is a specially trained doctor who identifies cancerous cells and tumors. DF/BWCC pathologists are well-known for their expert evaluation of testicular cancer. They will diagnose and classify your cancer quickly and competently.
Most testicular cancers are classified as germ-cell tumors. This is not an infection. Instead, the term germ cell reflects the fact that testicles make sperm. Germ cell tumors are divided into two types: seminoma and nonseminoma.
- Seminoma tumors are the more common kind of testicular cancer. They are usually limited to the testicle but occasionally spread to other parts of the body. Seminomas tend to grow very slowly and are very curable.
- Nonseminoma tumors can grow more quickly and can be more likely to spread beyond the testicle to other parts of the body.
- While these tumors are curable, men with nonseminoma tumors are more likely to require chemotherapy at some point in their treatment.
Another test to expect if you are diagnosed with testicular cancer
To decide what treatment is best for you, it is important to know whether or not your testicular cancer has spread beyond the testicle. Another kind of scan can be used to look for cancer in other parts of the body:
- A CT scan (also known as a CAT scan) is a painless procedure that takes a series of detailed x-ray pictures inside the body from different angles. The CT scan is quick and painless and will look at your abdomen and chest. The results are usually ready in just a few hours.
Surgery
Surgical removal of the testicle (radical inguinal orchiectomy) is a highly effective treatment for testicular cancer and is performed immediately to determine the stage of your cancer. Our testicular cancer surgical team at DF/BWCC is one of the most experienced in the country and has been working together for more than a decade. Removing your testicle will not affect your ability to have children in the future or your ability to achieve and sustain an erection. After surgery and any other treatment, you will continue to meet with your team of doctors for regular scans and health check-ups.
Some men dislike the thought of being “unequal,” with a testicle on one side but not the other. A “fake” testicle, called a prosthesis, can be placed in the scrotum at the time of surgery for any man who wishes to have one. This is not a decision you need to make immediately. Our urologists will work closely with you to prepare you for surgery and help you feel comfortable with the changes in your body.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy uses high-powered energy beams, such as X-rays, to kill cancer cells. During radiation therapy, you’re positioned on a table and a large machine moves around you, aiming the energy beams at precise points on your body.
Radiation therapy is a treatment option that’s sometimes used in people who have the seminoma type of testicular cancer. Radiation therapy may be recommended after surgery to remove your testicle.
Side effects may include nausea and fatigue, as well as skin redness and irritation in your abdominal and groin areas. Radiation therapy is also likely to temporarily reduce sperm counts and may impact fertility in some men. Talk to your doctor about your options for preserving your sperm before beginning radiation therapy.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy treatment uses drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy drugs travel throughout your body to kill cancer cells that may have migrated from the original tumor.
Chemotherapy may be your only treatment, or it may be recommended before or after lymph node removal surgery.
Side effects of chemotherapy depend on the specific drugs being used. Ask your doctor what to expect. Common side effects include fatigue, nausea, hair loss and an increased risk of infection. There are medications and treatments available that reduce some of the side effects of chemotherapy.
Chemotherapy may also lead to infertility in some men, which can be permanent in some cases. Talk to your doctor about your options for preserving your sperm before beginning chemotherapy.
Throat cancer
Throat cancer refers to cancerous tumors that develop in your throat (pharynx), voice box (larynx) or tonsils. Your throat is a muscular tube that begins behind your nose and ends in your neck. Throat cancer most often begins in the flat cells that line the inside of your throat.
Your voice box sits just below your throat and also is susceptible to throat cancer. The voice box is made of cartilage and contains the vocal cords that vibrate to make sound when you talk.
Throat cancer can also affect the piece of cartilage (epiglottis) that acts as a lid for your windpipe. Tonsil cancer, another form of throat cancer, affects the tonsils, which are located on the back of the throat.
Causes and Risk Factor
Factors that can increase your risk of throat cancer include:
- Tobacco use, including smoking and chewing tobacco
- Excessive alcohol use
- A sexually transmitted virus called human papillomavirus (HPV)
- A diet lacking in fruits and vegetables
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
What are the symptoms of Throat Cancer?
These and other signs and symptoms may be caused by laryngeal cancer or by other conditions. Check with your doctor if you have any of the following:
- A sore throat or cough that does not go away.
- Trouble or pain when swallowing.
- Ear pain.
- A lump in the neck or throat.
- A change or hoarseness in the voice.
How is Throat Cancer diagnosed?
In order to diagnose throat cancer, your doctor may recommend:
- Using a scope to get a closer look at your throat. Your doctor may use a special lighted scope (endoscope) to get a close look at your throat during a procedure called endoscopy. A tiny camera at the end of the endoscope transmits images to a video screen that your doctor watches for signs of abnormalities in your throat.
Another type of scope (laryngoscope) can be inserted in your voice box. It uses a magnifying lens to help your doctor examine your vocal cords. This procedure is called laryngoscopy.
- Removing a tissue sample for testing. If abnormalities are found during an endoscopy or laryngoscopy, your doctor can pass surgical instruments through the scope to collect a tissue sample (biopsy). The sample is sent to a laboratory for testing. Your doctor may also order a sample of a swollen lymph node using a technique called fine-needle aspiration.
- Imaging tests. Imaging tests, including X-ray, computerized tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET), may help your doctor determine the extent of your cancer beyond the surface of your throat or voice box.
Three types of standard treatment are used:
Radiation therapy is a cancer treatment that uses high-energy x-rays or other types of radiation to kill cancer cells or keep them from growing. There are two types of radiation therapy:
- External radiation therapy uses a machine outside the body to send radiation toward the cancer.
- External-beam radiation therapy of the head and neck. A machine is used to aim high-energy radiation at the cancer. The machine can rotate around the patient, delivering radiation from many different angles to provide highly conformal treatment. A mesh mask helps keep the patient’s head and neck from moving during treatment. Small ink marks are put on the mask. The ink marks are used to line up the radiation machine in the same position before each treatment.
- Internal radiation therapy uses a radioactive substance sealed in needles, seeds, wires, or catheters that are placed directly into or near the cancer.
The way the radiation therapy is given depends on the type and stage of the cancer being treated. External radiation therapy is used to treat laryngeal cancer.
Radiation therapy may work better in patients who have stopped smoking before beginning treatment. External radiation therapy to the thyroid or the pituitary gland may change the way the thyroid gland works. A blood test to check the thyroid hormone level in the body may be done before and after therapy to make sure the thyroid gland is working properly.
Hyperfractionated radiation therapy may be used to treat laryngeal cancer. Hyperfractionated radiation therapy is radiation treatment in which a smaller than usual total daily dose of radiation is divided into two doses and the treatments are given twice a day. Hyperfractionated radiation therapy is given over the same period of time (days or weeks) as standard radiation therapy. New types of radiation therapy are being studied in the treatment of laryngeal cancer.
Surgery
Surgery (removing the cancer in an operation) is a common treatment for all stages of laryngeal cancer. The following surgical procedures may be used:
- Cordectomy: Surgery to remove the vocal cords only.
- Supraglottic laryngectomy: Surgery to remove the supraglottis only.
- Hemilaryngectomy: Surgery to remove half of the larynx (voice box). A hemilaryngectomy saves the voice.
- Partial laryngectomy: Surgery to remove part of the larynx (voice box). A partial laryngectomy helps keep the patient’s ability to talk.
- Total laryngectomy: Surgery to remove the whole larynx. During this operation, a hole is made in the front of the neck to allow the patient to breathe. This is called a tracheostomy.
- Thyroidectomy: The removal of all or part of the thyroid gland.
- Laser surgery: A surgical procedure that uses a laser beam (a narrow beam of intense light) as a knife to make bloodless cuts in tissue or to remove a surface lesion such as a tumor in the larynx.
After the doctor removes all the cancer that can be seen at the time of the surgery, some patients may be given chemotherapy or radiation therapy after surgery to kill any cancer cells that are left. Treatment given after the surgery, to lower the risk that the cancer will come back, is called adjuvant therapy.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a cancer treatment that uses drugs to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells or by stopping the cells from dividing. When chemotherapy is taken by mouth or injected into a vein or muscle, the drugs enter the bloodstream and can reach cancer cells throughout the body (systemic chemotherapy). When chemotherapy is placed directly into the cerebrospinal fluid, an organ, or a body cavity such as the abdomen, the drugs mainly affect cancer cells in those areas (regional chemotherapy). The way the chemotherapy is given depends on the type and stage of the cancer being treated.
Targeted drug therapy
Targeted drugs treat throat cancer by taking advantage of specific defects in cancer cells that fuel the cells’ growth.
As an example, the drug Cetuximab (Erbitux) is one targeted therapy approved for treating throat cancer in certain situations. Cetuximab stops the action of a protein that’s found in many types of healthy cells but is more prevalent in certain types of throat cancer cells.
Thyroid Cancer
Thyroid cancer occurs in the cells of the thyroid — a butterfly-shaped gland located at the base of your neck, just below your Adam’s apple. Your thyroid produces hormones that regulate your heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, and weight.
Although thyroid cancer isn’t common around the world, rates seem to be increasing. Doctors think this is because new technology is allowing them to find small thyroid cancers that may not have been found in the past.
Most cases of thyroid cancer can be cured with treatment.
Causes and Risk Factors
Although the exact cause of thyroid cancer has not been identified, certain risk factors have been identified. They include:
- Age: Two-thirds of thyroid cancer cases occur between ages 20 and 55.
- Gender: Women are three times as likely as men to develop thyroid cancer. Papillary thyroid cancer is found most often in women of childbearing age.
- Exposure to radiation, including X-rays, especially during childhood
- Inherited disorders: Familial medullary thyroid cancer usually is caused by an inherited mutation in the RET gene. If your parent has the gene mutation, you have a 50% chance of having it too. If you inherit the gene, you are likely to develop the cancer. Other types of thyroid cancer also may be caused by diseases that run in families.
- Iodine deficiency: This is uncommon in the United States, where iodine often is added to table salt. In other areas of the world, especially inland regions without fish and shellfish in the diet, iodine levels are sometimes too low.
What are the symptoms of Thyroid Cancer?
Successful treatment of thyroid cancer is more likely when diagnosed early. Unfortunately, it often has few signs or symptoms and they vary from person to person.
If you do have signs or symptoms of thyroid cancer, they may include:
- Lump or nodule in the front of the neck
- Enlargement of the thyroid or swelling in the neck
- Pain in the front of the neck that may stretch to the ears
- Change in voice or hoarseness
- Breathing problems, especially the feeling that you are breathing through a straw
- Cough that does not go away and is not caused by a cold
- Cough with blood
- Swallowing problems
These symptoms do not always mean you have cancer. However, it is important to discuss any signs or symptoms with your doctor, since they may signal other health problems.
How is Thyroid Cancer diagnosed?
Tests and procedures used to diagnose thyroid cancer include:
- Physical exam. Your doctor will look for physical changes in your thyroid and ask about your risk factors, such as excessive exposure to radiation and a family history of thyroid tumors.
- Blood tests. Blood tests help determine if the thyroid gland is functioning normally.
- Removing a sample of thyroid tissue. During a fine-needle biopsy, your doctor inserts a long, thin needle through your skin and into the thyroid nodule. Ultrasound imaging is typically used to precisely guide the needle into the nodule. Your doctor uses the needle to remove samples of suspicious thyroid tissue. The sample is analyzed in the laboratory to look for cancer cells.
- Imaging tests. You may have one or more imaging tests to help your doctor determine whether your cancer has spread beyond the thyroid. Imaging tests may include computerized tomography (CT) scans, positron emission tomography (PET) or ultrasound.
- Genetic testing. Some people with medullary thyroid cancer may have genetic changes that can be associated with other endocrine cancers. Your family history may prompt your doctor to recommend genetic testing to look for genes that increase your risk of cancer.
Surgery
Three types of standard treatment are used:
- Removing all or most of the thyroid (thyroidectomy). In most cases, doctors recommend removing the entire thyroid to treat thyroid cancer. Your surgeon makes an incision at the base of your neck to access your thyroid.
In most cases, the surgeon leaves small rims of thyroid tissue around the parathyroid glands to reduce the risk of parathyroid damage. Sometimes surgeons refer to this as a near-total thyroidectomy.
- Removing lymph nodes in the neck. When removing your thyroid, the surgeon may also remove enlarged lymph nodes from your neck and test them for cancer cells.
- Removing a portion of the thyroid (thyroid lobectomy). In certain situations where the thyroid cancer is very small, your surgeon may recommend removing only one side (lobe) of your thyroid.
Thyroid surgery carries a risk of bleeding and infection. Damage can also occur to your parathyroid glands during surgery, which can lead to low calcium levels in your body. There’s also a risk of accidental damage to the nerves connected to your vocal cords, which can cause vocal cord paralysis, hoarseness, soft voice, or difficulty breathing.
Thyroid hormone therapy
After thyroidectomy, you’ll take the thyroid hormone medication levothyroxine (Levoxyl, Synthroid, others) for life. This medication has two benefits: It supplies the missing hormone your thyroid would normally produce, and it suppresses the production of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) from your pituitary gland. High TSH levels could conceivably stimulate any remaining cancer cells to grow. You’ll likely have blood tests to check your thyroid hormone levels every few months until your doctor finds the proper dosage for you. Blood tests may continue annually.
Radioactive iodine
Radioactive iodine treatment uses large doses of a form of iodine that’s radioactive. Radioactive iodine treatment is often used after thyroidectomy to destroy any remaining healthy thyroid tissue, as well as microscopic areas of thyroid cancer that weren’t removed during surgery. Radioactive iodine treatment may also be used to treat thyroid cancer that recurs after treatment or that spreads to other areas of the body.
Radioactive iodine treatment comes as a capsule or liquid that you swallow. The radioactive iodine is taken up primarily by thyroid cells and thyroid cancer cells, so there’s a low risk of harming other cells in your body.
Side effects may include:
- Nausea
- Dry mouth
- Dry eyes
- Altered sense of taste or smell
- Fatigue
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a drug treatment that uses chemicals to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy is typically given as an infusion through a vein. The chemicals travel throughout your body, killing quickly growing cells, including cancer cells. Chemotherapy is not commonly used in the treatment of thyroid cancer, but it may benefit some people who don’t respond to other therapies. For people with anaplastic thyroid cancer, chemotherapy may be combined with radiation therapy.
Injecting alcohol into cancers
Alcohol ablation involves injecting small thyroid cancers with alcohol using imaging such as ultrasound to ensure precise placement of the injection. This treatment helps treat cancer that occurs in areas that aren’t easily accessible during surgery. Your doctor may recommend this treatment if you have recurrent thyroid cancer limited to small areas in your neck.
Targeted drug therapy
Targeted drug therapy uses medications that attack specific vulnerabilities in your cancer cells. Targeted drugs used to treat thyroid cancer include:
- Cabozantinib (Cometriq)
- Sorafenib (Nexavar)
- Vandetanib (Caprelsa)
These drugs target the signals that tell cancer cells to grow and divide. They’re used in people with advanced thyroid cancer.
Vaginal cancer
Vaginal cancer is a rare cancer that occurs in your vagina — the muscular tube that connects your uterus with your outer genitals. Vaginal cancer most commonly occurs in the cells that line the surface of your vagina, which is sometimes called the birth canal.
While several types of cancer can spread to your vagina from other places in your body, cancer that begins in your vagina (primary vaginal cancer) is rare.
A diagnosis of early-stage vaginal cancer has the best chance for a cure. Vaginal cancer that spreads beyond the vagina is much more difficult to treat.
Causes and Risk Factors
Anything that increases your chance of getting vaginal cancer is a risk factor. These include:
- DES (diethylstilbestrol): This drug was given between 1940 and 1971 to some pregnant women to help them not have a miscarriage (lose the baby).
- Vaginal adenosis: In some women, especially those whose mothers took DES, the cells in the vagina change from squamous cells to endometrium (or glandular) cells.
- HPV (human papilloma virus)
- Cervical cancer or pre-cancer
- Smoking
- Drinking alcohol in excess
- HIV (Human immunodeficiency virus)
What are the symptoms of Vaginal Cancer?
Early vaginal cancer may not cause any signs and symptoms. As it progresses, vaginal cancer may cause signs and symptoms such as:
- Unusual vaginal bleeding, for example, after intercourse or after menopause
- Watery vaginal discharge
- A lump or mass in your vagina
- Painful urination
- Frequent urination
- Constipation
- Pelvic pain
How is Vaginal Cancer diagnosed?
Vaginal cancer diagnostic tests
If you have symptoms that may signal vaginal cancer, your doctor will examine you and ask you questions about your health; your lifestyle, including smoking and drinking habits; and your family history. One or more of the following tests may be used to find out if you have vaginal cancer and if it has spread. These tests also may be used to find out if treatment is working.
Biopsy
The only way to tell for sure if you have vaginal cancer is a biopsy. A small piece of tissue is removed, and then it is looked at under a microscope. Your doctor may use a colposcope to magnify the area and make it easier to remove the tissue. The doctor then looks at the area using colposcope, which is like binoculars with magnifying lenses, or a magnifying glass. A small piece of the suspicious area will be removed.
Imaging tests, which may include:
- CT or CAT (computed axial tomography) scans
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans
- PET (positron emission tomography) scans
- Chest X-ray
Endoscopic tests, which may include:
Proctosigmoidoscopy: An endoscope is inserted into the rectum to look at the rectum and colon. Biopsies can be done during the procedure.
Cystoscopy: An endoscope is inserted into the bladder through the urethra. Biopsies can be done during the procedure.
Surgery
Types of surgery that may be used to treat vaginal cancer include:
- Removal of small tumors or lesions. Cancer limited to the surface of your vagina may be cut away, along with a small margin of surrounding healthy tissue to ensure that all of the cancer cells have been removed.
- Removal of the vagina (vaginectomy). Removing part of your vagina (partial vaginectomy) or your entire vagina (radical vaginectomy) may be necessary to remove all of the cancer. Depending on the extent of your cancer, your surgeon may recommend surgery to remove your uterus and ovaries (hysterectomy) and nearby lymph nodes (lymphadenectomy) at the same time as your vaginectomy.
- Removal of the majority of the pelvic organs (pelvic exenteration). This extensive surgery may be an option if cancer has spread throughout your pelvic area or if your vaginal cancer has recurred.
During pelvic exenteration, the surgeon may remove many of the organs in your pelvic area, including your bladder, ovaries, uterus, vagina, rectum and the lower portion of your colon. Openings are created in your abdomen to allow urine (urostomy) and waste (colostomy) to exit your body and collect in ostomy bags.
If your vagina is completely removed, you may choose to undergo surgery to construct a new vagina. Surgeons use pieces of skin, sections of intestine or flaps of muscle from other areas of your body to form a new vagina.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy uses high-powered energy beams, such as X-rays, to kill cancer cells. Radiation can be delivered two ways:
- External radiation. External beam radiation is directed at your entire abdomen or just your pelvis, depending on the extent of your cancer. During external beam radiation, you’re positioned on a table and a large radiation machine is maneuvered around you in order to target the treatment area. Most women with vaginal cancer receive external beam radiation.
- Internal radiation. During internal radiation (brachytherapy), radioactive devices — seeds, wires, cylinders or other materials — are placed in your vagina or the surrounding tissue. After a set amount of time, the devices may be removed. Those with very early-stage vaginal cancer may receive internal radiation only. Others may receive internal radiation after undergoing external radiation.
Radiation therapy kills quickly growing cancer cells, but it may also damage nearby healthy cells, causing side effects. Side effects of radiation depend on the radiation’s intensity and where it’s aimed.
If surgery and radiation can’t control your cancer, you may be offered other treatments, including:
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy uses chemicals to kill cancer cells. It isn’t clear whether chemotherapy is useful for treating vaginal cancer. For this reason, chemotherapy generally isn’t used on its own to treat vaginal cancer. Chemotherapy may be used during radiation therapy to enhance the effectiveness of radiation.