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Anal Cancer

Treatment

 


TREATMENT OPTIONS BY STAGE


Stage 0 Anal Cancer (Carcinoma in Situ)

Treatment of stage 0 anal cancer is usually local resection.

Stage I Anal Cancer

  • Local resection.
  • External-beam radiation therapy with or without chemotherapy. If cancer remains after treatment, additional chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be given to avoid the need for a permanent colostomy.
  • Internal radiation therapy.
  • Abdominoperineal resection, if cancer remains or comes back after treatment with radiation therapy and chemotherapy.
  • Internal radiation therapy for cancer that remains after treatment with external-beam radiation therapy.
  • Patients who have had treatment that saves the sphincter muscles may receive follow-up exams every 3 months for the first 2 years, including rectal exams with endoscopy and biopsy, as needed.

Stage II Anal Cancer

  • Local resection.
  • External-beam radiation therapy with chemotherapy. If cancer remains after treatment, additional chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be given to avoid the need for a permanent colostomy.
  • Internal radiation therapy.
  • Abdominoperineal resection, if cancer remains or comes back after treatment with radiation therapy and chemotherapy.
  • Patients who have had treatment that saves the sphincter muscles may receive follow-up exams every 3 months for the first 2 years, including rectal exams with endoscopy and biopsy, as needed.

Stage IIIA Anal Cancer

  • External-beam radiation therapy with chemotherapy. If cancer remains after treatment, additional chemotherapy and radiation therapy may be given to avoid the need for a permanent colostomy.
  • Internal radiation therapy.
  • Abdominoperineal resection, if cancer remains or comes back after treatment with chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

Stage IIIB Anal Cancer

  • External-beam radiation therapy with chemotherapy.
  • Local resection or abdominoperineal resection, if cancer remains or comes back after treatment with chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Lymph nodes may also be removed.

Stage IV Anal Cancer

  • Surgery as palliative therapy to relieve symptoms and improve the quality of life.
  • Radiation therapy as palliative therapy.
  • Chemotherapy with radiation therapy as palliative therapy.

 

Glossary

  • Palliative therapy: Treatment given to relieve the symptoms and reduce the suffering caused by cancer and other life-threatening diseases.
  • Local resection: A surgical procedure in which the tumor is cut from the anus along with some of the healthy tissue around it. Local resection may be used if the cancer is small and has not spread. This procedure may save the sphincter muscles so the patient can still control bowel movements. Tumors that develop in the lower part of the anus can often be removed with local resection.
  • Abdominoperineal resection: A surgical procedure in which the anus, the rectum, and part of the sigmoid colon are removed through an incision made in the abdomen. The doctor sews the end of the intestine to an opening, called a stoma, made in the surface of the abdomen so body waste can be collected in a disposable bag outside of the body. This is called a colostomy. Lymph nodes that contain cancer may also be removed during this operation.

 

Reference:

National Cancer Institute, USA.

 

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