Treatment of Stage II Colorectal Cancer

This content has been reviewed and approved by

Howard Burris, MD
Director, Drug Development
Sarah Cannon Cancer Center
Tennessee Oncology
 

Treatment for stage II begins with resection or laparoscopic surgery to remove the cancer.

  • Resection - Your doctor will remove the cancer and a small amount of the healthy tissue surrounding the cancer. The doctor will usually sew the healthy parts of the colon together so that your bowel can continue to function normally. This procedure is known as anastomosis. In anastomosis, the doctor often removes lymph nodes near the colon and examines them under a microscope to find out if they have any cancer cells.
  • Laparoscopic surgery (also known as keyhole surgery) - In some cases, Stage II colorectal cancer can be treated with laparoscopic surgery. In laparoscopic surgery, the surgeon uses a laparoscope, or tiny telescope connected to a video camera. The laparoscope is put into a narrow tubelike instrument called a cannula, which has been inserted into the abdomen. The laparoscope shows a magnified view of the colon on a monitor. The surgeon inserts several other cannulas to work inside and take out part of the colon. The cuts needed to insert the cannulas are usually small and heal quickly.

If you have rectal cancer, you might be treated with radiation therapy and chemotherapy before surgery. This reduces the chance that the cancer will come back and can make the surgery more effective.

If you have colon cancer, you might be treated with radiation therapy to the area of the abdomen where the cancer was growing. Radiation therapy is more likely to be used if you still have some cancerous cells in your body after surgery. It can help reduce certain symptoms, such as pain.

  • External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) - This is the most common type of radiation treatment for people with colorectal cancer. A machine called a linear accelerator directs the radiation at the tumor from outside your body. The treatments last just a few minutes and are given 5 days a week for several weeks.

Chemotherapy is typically recommended if your cancer is likely to come back or if your doctor is not completely sure whether the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes. Your doctor might recommend one of the following chemotherapy drugs or combinations of chemotherapy drugs after your tumor has been removed by surgery:

  • Eloxatin® (oxaliplatin) - This drug can be very effective when it is combined with 5-FU and leucovorin. Sometimes oxaliplatin is combined with both 5-FU and folinic acid. This combination is known as FOLFOX (for folinic acid, 5-FU, and oxaliplatin). FOLFOX seems to be the most effective treatment for colorectal cancer that has returned (recurred) after it was originally treated.
  • Fluorouracil (5-FU) - This is the drug used most often to treat colorectal cancer. 5-FU is often given with another drug, leucovorin, to make it more effective. Patients usually receive injections of 5-FU over a few days or weeks and then take a few weeks off from chemotherapy. These cycles are repeated over 6 months to a year.
  • Xeloda® (capecitabine) - Capecitabine is usually taken by mouth. It actually turns into 5-FU when it gets to the tumor. This drug can be used instead of 5-FU and it acts as if the 5-FU were being given continuously.
This content was last modified on October 11, 2007 .
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