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ColorectalCancerInfo.com

Colorectal Cancer Treatment Options

There are different ways to treat colorectal cancer, including the following:

  • Surgery to remove the cancer. This is the most common treatment for colorectal cancer.
  • Chemotherapy, which means using anticancer drugs to kill cancer cells throughout the body. Your doctor may prescribe one or more chemotherapy drugs.
  • Radiation therapy, or radiotherapy, which means using X rays to kill cancer cells.
  • Immunotherapy, or biological therapy, which means that the body’s own immune system (which fights off infections and other illnesses) is made to recognize cancer cells and works to eliminate them.

You may get one or more of these treatments, depending on what your doctor identifies after you have been thoroughly examined and all test results have been reviewed.

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Surgery

Surgery is known as a local therapy because it treats the cancer cells in the colon and/or rectum and the areas close to the tumor. Surgical removal of the cancer is the most common treatment for colorectal cancer. Your physician will make treatment recommendation that best match your personal situation.

Key factors that will affect this decision include the following:

  • Whether the cancer is located in the colon or rectum
  • The staging of the cancer
  • The risk and benefits of the treatment

Depending on the stage of the tumor, surgery techniques can range from a polypectomy, to a local excision, to resection surgery. A segmental resection is the most commonly performed operation for the treatment of colorectal cancer.

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Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy is a type of systemic therapy because it enters the bloodstream and can affect cells all over the body. One or more chemotherapy drugs can be given, and chemotherapy can be combined with surgery, radiation therapy or both.

  • Chemotherapy after surgery, called adjuvant therapy , may be given to destroy remaining cancer cells missed by surgery.
  • Depending on the stage of cancer, as many as 70% to 85% of colon cancer patients treated with chemotherapy following surgery are alive and disease-free after 4 years.
  • Medications and additional therapies are now available to reduce or prevent some common side effects associated with chemotherapy, including nausea, fever and infections.

Learn more about a chemotherapy treatment by sanofi-aventis.

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Radiation therapy

Radiation therapy is a colorectal cancer treatment that is also a local therapy because the high-energy rays only target cells in the treated area. In patients with colon cancer, radiation therapy is often used to kill the cancer cells that remain after surgery. The two main types of radiation therapy are:

  • External radiation, which comes from a machine outside the body
  • Internal radiation, which comes from radioactive material inside thin tubes or pellets placed directly next to or in the tumor

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Immunotherapy

Immunotherapy, also know as biologic therapy or biotherapy, utilizes a person’s own immune system as an agent to treat colorectal cancer. This type of treatment uses substances naturally made by the body or recreated in a laboratory, to increase, direct and/or repair the body’s natural defense against cancer.

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