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- $Unique_ID{BRK01741}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Colorectal Cancer: Learn the Vital Facts}
- $Subject{Colorectal Cancer Cancers colon rectum Tumor Tumors benign malignant
- cancerous anaplasia intestine bowel constipated diarrhea procto proctoscope
- colostomies Radiation therapy Anticancer Chemotherapy chemicals OSTOMY
- DIGESTIVE system RECTAL GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY Carcinoma intestines bowels
- constipation chemical}
- $Volume{Y-0}
- $Log{
- Anatomy of the Colon*0001601.scf
- Glossary*0174101.tid}
-
- Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993
-
- Health Update
-
- by Dr. Allan Bruckheim
-
- Colorectal Cancer: Learn the Vital Facts
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- A real need--the need to know
-
- Reading this booklet may be among the most important things you ever do
- because it could help save YOUR life!
- The following information is about a type of cancer that may be
- avoidable, if you do certain simple things--and don't do others. Even though
- such cancers cannot always be avoided, they frequently can be treated
- successfully, if found EARLY. But if they are allowed to grow, the death rate
- from them usually is high--about 60 percent within five years after the cancer
- is detected.
- We now know that approximately 80 percent of cancer cases are related to
- the manner in which people live. Some examples are: the foods we eat, the
- work from which we earn our living and whether we use tobacco. Choose
- correctly and long, healthy life may be yours. The wrong choices lead to ill
- health, disease and possibly dreaded cancer.
- Knowing which things to avoid or some that might be increased can help us
- all take control over our lives and decrease the known chances for developing
- cancer. Admittedly, some are very difficult to control, such as where you
- work, the purity of the water you drink and the air you breathe. Others are
- easier to manage--as easy as eating the right, "good for you" foods.
- There are no guarantees, of course, but it's worth the little effort and
- time it will take to read this booklet. . . you never really know, it could
- make the difference between life and death
-
- Good news
-
- But there is good news. Medical science now has reliable ways to detect
- cancers of the colon and rectum early and the skills to treat them immediately
- and effectively, permitting you to live a full, fruitful life, but you must
- learn the principle of early detection to gain these benefits for yourself and
- for those you care about. If a cancer is found before it has time to do
- serious damage, grow and spread to other areas, it can be treated more easily,
- with less need for radical surgery, less pain, fewer drugs along with their
- side effects and less time away from work. Naturally, early detection will
- require less money to be spent while combatting the condition.
- Estimates indicate that 30,000 lives a year could be saved if people
- older than 40 would have an annual bowel exam. Others declare that the
- percentage of colorectal cancer patients who survive for five years after
- their cancers are diagnosed could more than double--from 40 percent to about
- 85 percent--if diagnosis occurred earlier. Earlier means before the cancer
- has a chance to spread into nearby lymph nodes, or to travel to other sites in
- our bodies.
-
- A "hush-hush" condition
-
- Many people have no problem discussing very intimate subjects, yet even
- in these days, when frank conversation is the rule, some still are reluctant
- to talk about their colons and rectums. They are parts of our digestive
- system that remain hidden and covered, concealed from view and thought.
- Strange isn't it, because every person has them! Also, nobody wants to talk
- about cancer, as if not talking about it could lessen its occurrence or
- effects. But, like many undesirable conditions, cancer breeds well in
- secrecy.
- The American Cancer Society estimates that during 1987, 145,000 new cases
- of cancer of the colon and/or rectum will be found in the United States. (All
- subsequent figures are for people in the United States.) Included in this
- figure are: 102,000 colon cancers and 43,000 cancers of the rectum. Such
- cancers, often referred to as "colorectal cancers," are the third most common
- cancer in this country. Only skin and lung cancers occur more frequently.
- Expected deaths in 1987 from colorectal cancers will climb to an estimated
- 60,000 (52,000 from colon and 8,000 from rectum cancers). Only lung cancer is
- expected to cause more deaths. These are not statistics we can pass over
- lightly!
- Colorectal cancer develops over a period of time, so detection of it is
- possible long before symptoms appear. Detecting small cancers and polyps
- reduces the likelihood of major surgery, yet not nearly enough people even
- consider being tested for colorectal cancers. In 1986, American men and women
- older than 40 were studied by the Gallup Poll organization as to how they felt
- about detection of colorectal cancer. Results of the study showed that only
- about 24 percent of people in that age group have ever asked their physicians
- to examine their colon or rectum. When they did ask for an exam, more than
- half of them did so only because there apparently was something wrong with
- those parts of their bodies, meaning they could have been running just a bit
- late in preventing a serious situation from developing.
-
- What is cancer?
-
- Cancer is not one disease. There are more than 100 different kinds of
- "cancer." Yet, they all have this in common: an abnormal growth of cells
- that use up our bodies' reserves rather than building or repairing vital
- tissues.
- Healthy cells, that usually make up all the body's tissues, normally
- grow, divide and replace themselves in an orderly, self-controlled manner.
- Sometimes those normal cells lose their ability to limit and direct their
- growth. . . then they may grow wildly and form tumors.
- Tumors can be of two types: benign or malignant. Benign tumors do not
- often spread and seldom are a threat to life. Frequently, these can be
- removed by surgery, and usually do not return.
- Malignant tumors are cancerous. They can invade and destroy other nearby
- tissues and organs. Cancers also can metastasize, or spread, to other,
- sometimes distant, parts of the body and continue to grow. Many scientists
- currently believe most cancers are caused in two steps by two kinds of agents.
- Those are "initiators" and "promoters."
- "Initiators" start the damage to a cell that can lead to cancer. . . that
- could be cigarette smoke, X-rays and some chemicals. "Promoters" often do not
- cause cancer alone. They change cells already damaged by an initiator from
- normal to cancerous. Some studies have shown that alcohol promotes the
- development of cancers in the mouth, throat and probably in the liver,
- especially when combined with an initiator such as tobacco.
- Cancer afflicts humans and probably all other animals. It can arise in
- any organ or tissue in the body. It is second only to diseases of the heart
- and blood vessels as the major killer of Americans.
- Another of cancer's characteristics is its appearance when viewed through
- a microscope. Its individual cells vary in size and shape, and the orderly
- pattern displayed by normal tissue is replaced by disorganization that may be
- so complete that no recognizable structures remain. Such loss of normal
- appearance is called "anaplasia." Some cancers grow very slowly and destroy
- neighboring tissue, others are more aggressive and spread rapidly to distant
- areas of the body. In either case they are a serious threat to life and
- longevity.
-
- What are the colon and rectum?
-
- Your colon and rectum are a part of your digestive tract (see diagram),
- or gastrointestinal system. The main function of the digestive tract is to
- extract the essential nutrients, fluids and electrolytes from foods and
- liquids that have been ingested. Another part of the tract's function is to
- dispose of wastes from the digestive process.
- The final part of the digestive tract is called the colon. It also is
- referred to as the large bowel. It starts with the cecum, a pouch that
- receives liquid material from the small intestine. The colon extends from the
- cecum to the rectum in an inverted U shape. It is made up of four parts: the
- ascending, transverse, descending and sigmoid sections.
- The ascending colon extends from the cecum upward along the right side of
- the abdomen. At a point just under the ribs, this tubelike organ turns left
- and crosses the upper portion of the abdomen. That section is called the
- transverse colon. The descending section extends downward along the left side
- of the abdomen to the pelvic region. There it meets the S-like sigmoid
- portion of the colon. The sigmoid colon is connected to the rectum. The
- rectum is the final eight to 10 inches of the colon. The anus is located at
- the end of the rectum.
-
- Symptoms
-
- Symptoms of colorectal cancers depend greatly on the location and
- function of the part of the intestine where the disease develops. The most
- frequent symptom is a change in bowel habits such as being constipated or
- having diarrhea. Other symptoms include a change in the size of your stools,
- discomfort or pain in your abdomen, unexpected weight loss, unexplainable and
- lingering tiredness, frequent gas pains, and/or blood in your stools (it may
- be black or bright red).
- Such symptoms do not necessarily mean you have cancer. They could be
- caused by other conditions such as ulcers or an inflamed colon. It is equally
- important to remember that early cancer may have no symptoms at all, and a
- routine but regular examination will be the best prevention. Whatever, the
- case, however, should any of the above symptoms last for up to two weeks, see
- your doctor as soon as possible. That's when the principle of "early
- diagnosis: can be made to work in your favor.
-
- Who's most likely to develop it?
-
- In Western industrialized countries, colorectal cancers attack both men
- and women, blacks and whites. Colorectal cancer is particularly common in the
- United States and Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and other
- highly industrialized nations.
- Contrastingly, it occurs infrequently in India, Colombia, Senegal and
- other areas that are economically poorly developed. So it appears that the
- environment and eating habits have a great deal to do with who is most likely
- to develop such cancers.
- The conditions occurs most often in people older than 40. The risk
- becomes even greater at 50 and doubles with each decade, reaching a peak at
- age 75. Also, it is particularly frequent in people who have a personal or
- family history of colorectal cancer, cancer in other parts of the body, in
- people with a history of polyps in the colon or rectum and those with
- inflammatory bowel diseases (such as ulcerative colitis).
- Nearly all colorectal cancers develop from polyps, especially adenomas.
- Most polyps in the colon do not become cancerous, but their presence--or a
- history of polyps--points to increased risk. The greater the number and size
- of polyps in the colon, the greater the risk. Approximately 5 percent of
- patients who have a single diagnosed colon cancer develop another somewhere
- else in the colon. More black male and female Americans develop, and die
- from, cancer--including colorectal cancer--than do their white counterparts,
- according to statistics covering a 30-year time span.
-
- Screening for colorectal cancer
-
- Examining people with no symptoms to detect cancer is known as screening.
- Several techniques have been studied to develop effective screening methods
- for colorectal cancer. One of the simplest, safest and cheapest is to test
- for occult (hidden) blood in the stool. The most reliable of these tests
- usually require a laboratory, but home tests have a real role in the detection
- of cancer. While not as reliable as those performed in clinical laboratories,
- any test for blood that aids in early diagnosis must be considered valuable.
- Large-scale public screening programs have been suggested by some
- researchers. They state that such tests could uncover asymptomatic (showing
- no symptoms) bowel cancer and point out that examinations for occult blood in
- a test group doubled the detection of colorectal cancer. Others argue that
- because compliance by the public would be low, and test results are not always
- correct, wide-scale screening would not be worth the money and effort
- required.
-
- Asymptomatic patients
-
- A doctor may suspect that a patient could have colorectal cancer even
- though he/she is asymptomatic. Asymptomatic patients could be those without
- rectal bleeding, etc., but who have anemia or in whom unsuspected findings
- were discovered during examination. Patients with past histories of adenoma,
- colorectal cancer, ulcerative colitis or family histories of cancer
- particularly will need frequent checkups. It may surprise you to learn that
- 65 percent of cancers of the colon or rectum are within reach of an examining
- finger or can be detected by a simple sigmoidoscopic examination.
-
- Diagnosis
-
- A physical examination from your doctor is the only way to be positive
- that you do not have colorectal cancer. To check the rectal area, your
- physician will insert a gloved, lubricated finger into it and gently feel for
- anything abnormal
- The doctor may decide to do a "procto" (an exam which allows him/her to
- actually look into the rectum). To do that a proctoscope (small, short,
- rigid, hollow, lighted instrument) is inserted into the rectum. To examine
- the sigmoid portion of your colon, a sigmoidoscope (a small, hollow, lighted
- instrument) may be inserted into the anus. There may be need for further
- tests.
- Perhaps your doctor will want you to have a series of "lower GI"
- X-rays--taken after a thick solution of barium flows into the bowel through an
- enema tube. The barium allows an outline of the large intestine to show on
- the X-ray pictures. On occasion, air is pumped into the colon during a
- barium-enema to provide better photographs of any small tumors that may be
- present. That is called an air-contrast barium enema. Results from such
- X-ray photographs may reveal tumors that were not found during other tests.
- Nowadays, however, you are more likely to undergo an exam using a
- colonoscope. Colonoscopes allow a physician to visually examine the entire
- colon through a long, small, flexible, hollow, lighted fiberoptic instrument.
- Colonoscopes permit identification of colorectal cancers at an earlier stage
- than is possible with X-rays or other external examination techniques. The
- instrument also allows the doctor to remove precancerous polyps or other
- suspicious growths in the colon during the examination. Such growths must go
- through a laboratory process called biopsy for definite determination of
- whether they are malignant or benign.
- It was this procedure, on a routine examination, that led to the
- discovery of President Reagan's cancer and its successful removal.
- Additionally, the use of the colonoscopy often can replace what formerly was
- known as "exploratory surgery" (surgically opening the body to find what is
- causing a problem), thereby saving pain, anxiety, inconvenience, time and
- money.
-
- Treatment
-
- If a malignant tumor is found, your doctor will want to start a treatment
- plan for you. The plan will be designed to fit the type and extent of both
- your cancer and your individual needs.
-
- Staging
-
- The first step in treatment often is to find out the "stage" of the
- cancer. Colorectal cancer is classified, or staged, by direct observation of
- the tumor, either during microscopic examination of tumor cells (pathologic
- staging) or during surgery. Staging tests show whether the disease has spread
- from its starting point to other parts of the body and will help your doctor
- plan the best treatment.
- Physicians often order X-rays or other visual exams (scans) of the chest,
- liver, kidneys and bladder. Blood tests are used to measure certain
- substances that may increase in the liver or the blood of those having such
- cancers. The same types of blood tests sometimes are used later to determine
- how well a patient is responding to treatment.
- Duke's pathologic staging system, developed years ago, separates
- colorectal cancers into three groups--Stage A: tumors that are found only in
- the wall of the bowel and do not extend into surrounding muscle; Stage B:
- those that have penetrated into the muscle; and Stage C: cancer that has
- spread into lymph nodes. The system has been modified to include more
- distinct phases that can occur in stages B and C. Some physicians have added
- a stage D. And as our knowledge has increased, other systems of staging the
- extent of the cancer have been developed and are used by some physicians.
-
- Plan
-
- Following staging, your physician will develop a treatment plan to fit
- your medical history, general health, as well as the location and type or
- cancer involved. But before that treatment commences, you may want (and your
- health insurance company may require) a second doctor's opinion and review of
- your diagnosis and treatment plan. If so, you may wish to take advantage of
- some of the resources listed in the back of this booklet.
- No matter how many different opinions one obtains, there are only three
- basic colorectal cancer treatment methods. They are: surgery, radiation
- therapy (includes X-ray, radio, cobalt and/or irradiation therapy) and drug
- therapy (chemotherapy). Decisions regarding the use of just one of the above,
- two or all of them will depend on your unique treatment needs. You may be
- referred to other physicians for specific treatment in one, or all, of those
- three different specialties.
-
- Surgery
-
- The above notwithstanding, the standard treatment for colorectal cancer
- is surgery. Therefore, it usually is not a question of if you need surgery,
- but what type. The size of the cancer and where it is located determines, to
- a great extent, the type of surgery required. Hopefully, your surgeon may
- have to remove only a small portion of the bowel that contains the cancer.
- (See diagram on Page 5.) Following that, yet during that same operation, it is
- possible that the remaining healthy sections can be rejoined. Such surgical
- procedures (another term for what commonly is called an operation) are named
- bowel resection. Frequently, resections are required if a cancer is in the
- right-hand side of a colon (ascending), or in the trans verse colon. In such
- cases, it often is advisable to remove nearby lymph nodes that help drain the
- areas because they are among the most typical area to which colorectal cancers
- spread. The lymph system carries vital fluid throughout the body, much like
- the blood system carries blood. The lymph system also can carry cancer cells
- in its fluid as it flows from one part of the body to others. When lymph
- nodes are removed there is less chance for a cancer to spread.
- When a cancer blocks the bowel an operation known as a colostomy may be
- required. Colostomies either are temporary or permanent. Approximately 95
- percent of colorectal cancer patients require only a temporary colostomy. In
- both temporary and permanent colostomies, a surgeon removes the cancerous part
- of the bowel and creates an opening (called a "stoma") in the abdomen through
- which wastes are routed out of the body. A colostomy makes waste removal
- possible without the necessity of it passing through the lower colon and
- rectum
- Temporary colostomies are performed to allow the lower colon and rectum
- to rest and heal. Following the healing process, a second operation is
- performed to close the stoma, at which time the body can resume normal
- digestive and elimination functions.
- When a cancer occurs in the lower rectum, usually the entire rectum will
- have to be removed. In such cases, a permanent colostomy is needed. After
- such an operation, a bag, called an appliance, is attached to the stoma to
- collect waste. You must wear the colostomy appliance continually. Luckily,
- it does not show under everyday clothing, and a therapist can teach you how to
- take care of your stoma and appliance with very little adjustment in your
- everyday mode of living.
- Fortunately, advances in surgical techniques and medical care have made
- extensive surgery possible for people previously considered too old or infirm
- for it. So there is new hope for all, and many more can be helped.
-
- Radiation therapy
-
- Radiation therapy utilizes high-energy rays to stop cancerous cells from
- growing and spreading. It can be used prior to, or following, surgery, to
- shrink a tumor, or to destroy cancer cells that might not have been removed
- during an operation. It also may relieve pain caused by some cancers. Your
- physician will define a radiation therapy schedule for you, if you need it,
- based on your condition's exact requirements.
- Usually you will not have to be hospitalized while receiving radiation
- therapy. Your treatments will be administered by radiation therapists located
- in private offices, clinics or hospitals. Until recently, radiation therapy
- was not used extensively in treating colorectal cancer. However, advanced
- research indicates that when radiation is used before an operation, it may be
- possible to stop the growth of a large number of cancer cells. That action
- reduces the risk of recurrence and metastasis.
-
- Anticancer medications
-
- Chemotherapy is the term used when cancer patients are treated with
- anticancer drugs. Chemotherapy usually is given when there are indications
- that a cancer has spread to other parts of the body, or when that danger seems
- probable. Chemotherapy, as with all anticancer treatments, works best
- early--before the cancer has had a chance to grow much.
- Various chemicals are used as medications in chemotherapy and there are
- different ways of administering them. Some are given orally some are more
- potent when administered by injection into a vein, artery or muscle.
- Frequently, chemotherapy is given in cycles: a period of treatment,
- followed by a period with none, then another treatment period, a period with
- none. No matter how you receive chemotherapy, the medicines travel through
- your bloodstream to nearly every area of your body, assisting it to halt the
- growth and division of cancer cells. Many of the medicines can be given to
- you as an outpatient. With others, you may have to be hospitalized for a few
- days so that your doctors can watch what effects the drugs produce. After
- that initial stay, usually you will be able to receive your medications at the
- hospital but on an outpatient basis.
- A large amount of research is being done to study the use of anticancer
- drugs alone--or along with radiation--shortly after surgery in efforts to
- reduce the chance of recurrence. Many current chemotherapy research studies,
- particularly those involving patients with advanced colorectal cancer, use
- several drugs in combination.
- Some of the most frequently administered are: 5-fluorouracil,
- vincristine, methyl CCNU, methotrexate and DTIC. Of course, other drugs are
- in use in research that, hopefully, soon will increase chemotherapy's
- abilities to help control cancer.
- Immunotherapy, the use of the body's own immune system to treat cancer,
- also is being studied with what appears to be encouraging results. The
- National Large Bowel Cancer Project has underwritten a number of preclinical
- studies to develop new medical ways to treat colorectal cancers--particularly
- those in the large bowel. These are undertaken in hope of discovering new,
- innovative and, importantly, more effective methods to help cancer patients.
-
- Treatments may have side effects
-
- Because any cancer can spread rapidly and with life-threatening results,
- drugs used against them must be extraordinarily powerful. Because of that, it
- is almost impossible to limit the effects of chemotherapy to the point that
- only cancerous cells are destroyed. Nearby normal cells often are damaged
- along with those containing cancer.
- With that in mind, you will understand why chemotherapy patients often
- experience unpleasant side effects as their disease is being fought by the
- medications. Chemotherapy affects the cancer cells and other rapidly growing
- ones such as hair cells and some cells that form the tissue lining the
- digestive tract. That can result in such side effects as hair loss, nausea
- and vomiting. Periods of radiation therapy may produce unusual tiredness and
- skin reactions surrounding the area of treatment. Additionally, loss of
- appetite that many cancer patients experience can be a serious side effect.
- But cancer patients need to consume a balanced diet. Research has proved
- that patients who eat well are much more able to withstand various therapies
- and their side effects. Eating well also helps patients prevent serious
- weight loss. Physicians consider nutrition a necessary part of a treatment
- plan. Particularly important is having enough protein in one's diet to build
- and repair organs, muscles, skin and hair. Cancer patients often find it
- easier to eat frequent, smaller meals throughout the day rather than the usual
- three large meals.
- Your physician, along with dietitians and nurses, can provide expert
- advice on what side effects you may experience and how best to deal with them.
- They also can recommend advisable diet planning to help you keep your strength
- and weight.
- When your treatments are completed, you should continue to have medical
- examinations regularly so that your physician can monitor your progress.
- Should physical rehabilitation be needed, your doctor may be relied upon to
- offer you good counsel and direction. Your local hospital may be quite
- helpful with information, and other community organizations are prepared to
- give you many kinds of help.
- The social service department at your hospital can advise about local
- organizations that offer help for cancer patients and their families. The
- assistance offered may include financial aid, transportation to and from the
- hospital for medical care and homemaker services. (Here again, a careful study
- of some of the names and addresses of helpful organizations included in this
- booklet may get you off to the living start you need.)
-
- Dealing with changes after cancer
-
- So far, we have discussed only matters dealing with your body. But all
- of us have emotions, and when we are physically ill we cannot be at our best
- mentally and emotionally. Therefore, you need to understand some of the
- feelings and confusions that cancer patients, and those close to them, often
- experience.
- During the course of dealing with cancer, there probably will be times
- when you, and those close to you, will feel depressed and frightened. There
- also may be wide swings in feelings, from despair to hope to fear to courage.
- It is important to realize that such feelings are usually normal emotions
- that most of us experience while coping with disturbing changes--particularly
- those over which we have little control. Many times talking openly with
- family and trusted friends about your illness and its effects can help you
- accept your condition and adjust to the emotional stresses that you are
- experiencing. Almost every patient has concerns about medical treatments,
- tests, surgery, radiation, hospitals, their costs and many other parts of the
- cancer-treatment world.
- Again, talking can help. Discussions with your doctors, nurses and other
- health professionals may help you deal with fear and confusion. Do not
- hesitate to discuss costs with all members of your health-care team, if you
- wish. Certainly have a full understanding of the benefits provided by your
- health insurance. Talk those matters over with your insurance agent. If
- Medicare is to be a part of your payment strategy, discuss those matters with
- an official knowledgeable about Medicare. Make sure you understand exactly
- what costs are covered so that you meet no financial surprises during
- treatment.
- It is wise to assume an active part in as many necessary decisions as
- possible concerning your medical care. You can do this by asking any
- questions you wish about your treatment and expected course of recovery. You
- may wish to write your questions out as they occur to you and then take them
- with you to the doctor's office. Also, taking notes during your discussions
- with your health-care team can be an excellent way of helping you understand
- and remember what is expected of you and what you may expect. Be sure to ask
- your doctor to repeat any point about which you are not certain, or to more
- fully explain any area you do not completely understand. In the anxiety of
- the moment, it is easy to misunderstand information, confuse instructions and
- just be so overwhelmed by it all that nothing seems to stick in that head of
- yours. But you have a right and an obligation to know and understand. You
- just keep asking those questions until you get all the information you need.
- It is certain that those who undergo anticancer treatment are going to
- have to change some of their living habits. Unfortunately, some comfortable
- ways of doing things may even have to be eliminated, or drastically reduced,
- for a long period of time. The ability to work or engage in other usual
- activities will have to be dealt with. Patients, particularly those who have
- undergone surgery, often are concerned that changes in their bodies not only
- may alter their appearance, but their worth to others. Many worry that they
- no longer can hold a job, take care of their families, or fulfil their sexual
- roles.
- Concerns about the inability to engage in sex can be especially difficult
- for patients and their sex partners. Such concerns may alter the potentially
- healing activities that a close and caring relationship can provide. Time is
- a great healer. As a patient recovers, things begin to look brighter.
- Gradually even changes such as having a colostomy can come to be accepted as a
- part of one's "self." with loving support, a patient can feel reassured that
- he/she has the same specialness that made him/her unique prior to cancer
- treatments.
- Doctors are the people best equipped to give patients advice about
- necessary, limits on specific activities. Yet, many patients find it almost
- impossible to discuss intimate feelings, fears and other extremely personal
- matters with their physicians. In that case, there are support groups that
- welcome new members. The groups are made up of cancer patients, their
- relatives and other concerned people. These groups can be located through
- cancer societies in your area, from information available in your public
- library, or by looking in the telephone directory. Your public library is an
- excellent source of books and articles on most aspects of cancer, including
- how to adjust to its effects. Whenever a patient's (or their relatives')
- emotional problems become severe, therapy with a mental health professional
- may become necessary. Your doctor then can refer you to a reputable
- specialist.
-
- When a family member has cancer
-
- When anyone in your family is stricken with cancer, you and everyone else
- in your family group will feel that awful blow. It can be confusing and
- frightening, make you feel alone and defenseless, provoke emotions of both
- anger and guilt, and much more. You know that any illness changes family life
- for a while, but cancer is different.
- The patient needs special medical treatment and may be required to visit
- the hospital or clinic very often for a long while. Everyone in the family
- probably will worry, both for the patient and for themselves. Most likely
- everyone in your family will react differently; they may be nervous about the
- future, tired and very concerned. Some may go on just as though little had
- happened; some may cry a great deal and be so upset that they have trouble
- operating in a normal manner.
- There are times when family members experience anger at the patient and/
- or others in the family for the way they are acting, for the limits and
- interruptions the illness places on the lives of all family members. The best
- way to deal with these various and sometimes confusing emotions is to talk
- with each other and try to gain a better understanding about what each person
- is feeling. If the emotions become so complex that talking at home does
- little good, discuss the situation with your family physician. He/she may be
- able to suggest a group, social or governmental agency, or another specialist
- who can help you.
- Sometimes it helps to know how others have felt in similar situations; it
- may make your own feelings and fears a bit more easily dealt with. The
- following list contains information that other families have found helpful to
- know:
- -- More people are living with cancer now than ever before and new ways to
- treat it are being discovered with greater frequency.
- -- Nothing that a family member did, did not do, or said caused the loved
- one to have cancer.
- -- Having cancer does not necessarily mean the patient will die.
- -- Cancer is not contagious.
- -- Not you, nor anyone else, could have protected your loved one from
- cancer.
- -- If one of your parents has cancer, you, or your siblings, will not
- necessarily develop the disease.
- -- If you become ill, it does not mean that you have cancer also.
- -- There are no answers to questions concerning why anyone has to have
- cancer, or any other disease. . . or why you are healthy and someone else is
- critically ill.
- Above all, do not be ashamed or afraid of the way you feel. Others in
- your situation have felt the same way. It may not be very easy to live in
- your family right now but it's the only alternative you have. And then we all
- have a faith that tells us that somehow, things will get better. . . soon.
-
- Chances for survival
-
- More than 5 million Americans who have had some form of cancer are alive
- today! Some of them were colorectal cancer patients who now are living
- meaningful, rewarding lives. Colorectal cancer survival statistics have
- improved a bit over the past 20 years. Improvements appear to be related to
- advances in surgical techniques, along with those in anesthesia and
- refinements in postoperative care. Additionally, cancer research scientists
- are making frequent advances in their continuing efforts to discover more
- effective ways to detect cancer, treat those who suffer from it and help
- patients regain their health.
- It bears repeating that the survival outlook for each patient depends on
- the type of the cancer he/she is stricken by, the stage of the disease, as
- well as the individual patient's age, general health, medical history and
- response to treatment. Physicians often use the term "surviving" cancer. At
- other times they may say "remission" or "disease-free interval" rather than
- the word "cure."
- That is done because a cancer that was not detected early may spread by
- the time the diagnosis was made. It may reappear in another part of the
- patient's body long after the original cancer has been destroyed and the
- patient is feeling well. As mentioned earlier, such an unwelcome reappearance
- is called a "recurrence." That's why physicians check and recheck on a
- regular schedule over long periods of time after your original treatment to
- make sure the cancer was completely destroyed and is not silently attacking a
- different part of your body. And that's why patients who have been treated
- for colorectal cancer must have scoping exams and stool tests checked for
- blood as often as twice every year.
-
- You are not a statistic
-
- There are many "chances for survival" statistics appearing in the media
- almost every week. They are even mentioned in this booklet. However, it is
- important for you to keep in mind that all cancer survival statistics are
- based on the results of many, many cases of cancer. Yet, no two cancer
- patients are alike. So trying to figure out your own chances based on
- statistics that you have read, or that a friend thinks he/she has heard about,
- really is a waste of your time. Only your doctor and those who take care of
- patients with conditions and histories much like yours know enough about the
- situation to predict your course of recovery. . . and even that will only be a
- highly educated guess! Remember you are different from anyone else, and that
- uniqueness has a lot to do with your prognosis.
-
- Are clinical trials for you?
-
- I have been asked often if there's some new, experimental drug that could
- be obtained to help a patient. While some cancer patients express desires to
- take part in clinical trials in efforts to have access to new and still
- unproven chemicals used in research, others are not sure what a clinical trial
- is. Therefore, this section will serve as a brief introduction to the subject
- and explain how further, more complete information may be obtained.
- In research for new weapons against cancer, clinical trials are studies
- conducted with cancer patients most often aimed at evaluating specific new
- treatments and answering scientific questions concerning safety and
- effectiveness of the new, proposed medication.
- Before a new treatment is tried on human patients, there has been much
- basic research in laboratory and animal studies. Those substances that yield
- the most promise are researched further to try to find how they can best be
- used. However, such research cannot accurately predict exactly how a new
- treatment will work in real clinical situations. Nor can it predict exactly
- what risks there will be.
- Nevertheless, additional information is gained during trials about a new
- treatment: how safe it is; what some of its side effects may be; how well it
- actually works when given to humans. There is always the possibility that the
- results of these new treatments will be disappointing and that the drug will
- be ineffective.
- Only patients who wish to do so and who understand exactly what is
- required may participate in clinical trials. They do so most often in hope of
- receiving benefits for themselves such as being cured or perhaps living longer
- and feeling better during that time. Also, many wish to make some
- contribution to research efforts that possibly could help others.
- Of course, those patients participating in a clinical trial are among the
- first to receive the new research treatment before it is made widely
- available. Patients are carefully monitored during the study and must
- participate in follow-up studies that may last for years.
- Understand that new treatments--like all treatments, new or old--can
- cause side effects and risks depending on the type of treatment and the
- patient's condition. Clinical trials may research new areas of knowledge
- where it is not always possible to correctly evaluate the possible risks,
- though a tremendous amount of time, money and effort have been invested to
- find out as much as possible about those risks.
- Clinical trials come in many forms. They range anywhere from studies of
- ways to prevent, detect, diagnose, control and treat cancer, to those of the
- psychological impact of the disease and methods of improving a patient's
- quality of life. Most such trials concerning cancer deal with new treatments,
- often involving surgery, radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy.
- Anyone considering joining a clinical trial needs to know what is
- involved in it, what the expected side effects are and as much as possible
- about the uncertainties they might be facing.
- Informed consent is required in trials that are federally regulated or
- funded, as well as by many state laws. It means a patient has been given
- information so that he/she can understand what is involved in the trial,
- including potential benefits and risks, and then has decided freely to take
- part.
- Not every cancer patient can or should participate in trials of this
- sort. The trials are designed to answer sets of specific research questions.
- Only when a patient fits the particular guidelines for a trial will he/she be
- eligible to enroll, and only special types of individuals who can deal with
- the uncertainties of untried therapy should even consider the possibilities of
- participating. While there is always the hope of a desired cure, there is
- always the possibility of failure.
-
- How might it be prevented?
-
- This whole booklet might never have been written, if it were possible to
- completely and totally prevent colorectal cancer. Obviously we haven't made
- it to that point yet. But there are some good tips to help you lessen the
- risk of falling victim to this killer. Here they are. Read them carefully
- and try to make as many of them as possible a part of your health program.
- Patients who have no symptoms but who are older than 40 should have an
- annual physical examination which includes an occult blood test of the feces.
- Sigmoidoscopy should be done every three to five years to make certain that
- your colon is still free from polyps.
- -- Patients who have had prior adenoma polyps removed should be kept under
- surveillance and have a colonoscopy on the average of every three years.
- -- Those suffering from ulcerative colitis for seven years or more should
- have a colonoscopy once each year.
- Medical scientists are making increasing progress in identifying things
- in our environment that are associated with the development of colorectal
- cancer, as well as people who probably are at high risk for such cancers.
- Different researchers are taking differing approaches to how colorectal cancer
- might be prevented. At this time, many of those approaches include a prudent
- diet and efforts to develop medications to help prevent cancer. While no
- concrete dietary advice can be given that will guarantee prevention of any
- specific human cancer, the following nutritional guidelines recommended by the
- American Cancer Society may help reduce your chances of developing colorectal
- (and other) cancer:
- -- Avoid obesity. Approximately a million American men and women were
- studied for more than 10 years with results that showed higher cancer risks
- among those who are overweight. The obese, especially those 40 percent over
- their ideal weights, have a 1 1/2 times greater risk of colon/rectal cancer.
- -- Eat a diet high in fiber. While still controversial, the possibility of
- real advantages of this type of diet makes this advice reasonable. Should it
- someday be proven that fiber is not a protective against cancer as some
- evidence would make it appear, high-fiber fruits, vegetables and cereals are
- wholesome substitutes for the dangerous fatty foods.
- -- Drastically reduce your intake of fat and sugar. Cutting back on fatty,
- sugar-filled foods helps reduce your chances of developing cancers of many
- types. Additionally, reducing fats and sugars will help you maintain your
- best weight, or perhaps help you in a weight-reduction program.
- -- Eat some foods rich in vitamins A and C every day. Note that this says
- foods. Avoid excessive supplementary consumption of capsules or tablets of
- vitamin A, which can be quite harmful. (A few high-vitamin A foods are:
- apricots, dried beans, asparagus; some of those with high vitamin C content
- are: citrus fruits, red and green peppers and brussels sprouts.)
- -- Eat some cruciferous vegetables--cabbage, broccoli, brussels sprouts,
- kohlrabi and/or cauliflower--daily.
- -- Be moderate in drinking alcohol. Heavy drinkers, particularly if they
- smoke also, place themselves in an unusually high risk group who often develop
- cancers of the mouth and throat. Alcohol abuse also can result in cirrhosis,
- which in turn can lead to cancer of the liver.
- Just because you change your eating habits does not mean you have to give
- up all the foods you like in your efforts to protect yourself and your loved
- ones against cancer risks. The idea is to choose more often the foods that
- may help reduce your risks of cancer and choose less often the foods that
- might well increase your risks of developing cancer.
- Changing the manner in which you prepare foods also can be a great help.
- Whatever you do, at the start make the changes that are the easiest for you.
- You do not have to make them all at one time. Simply eat more fruits and
- vegetables. . . a little more each day. Buy more low-fat milks, cheeses and
- yogurts. Also, choose 100 percent whole wheat or whole grain baked goods.
- You will find it is not at all hard to eat more healthfully and it can be real
- fun to figure out what is best for you and what tastes best to you.
- Because there has been so much publicity regarding the advisability of
- increasing our intake of fiber, a word or two of additional explanation may be
- helpful. Fiber, particularly that found in natural cereals, absorbs water in
- the stomach, which helps to increase fecal weight and speeds bowel movements.
- Rapid elimination of feces reduces certain acids in the bowel and decreases
- the time body waste is in contact with the wall of the bowel. That lowers the
- possibility of the bowel's walls being injured by harmful elements present in
- the stool. Additionally, the increased bulk created by fiber helps dilute the
- effects of potential cancer-causing substances.
- To add 15 gm of fiber to your diet, consume one additional serving of a
- cereal, legume, vegetable and fruit every day. Remember that is in addition
- to the amount you are already eating. It is wise to make small increases in
- fiber intake over a period of days because an abrupt change in the amount
- eaten could lead to diarrhea and increased gas. A few high-fiber foods are:
- bran, corn, apples, raisins, bananas, peas, potatoes, baked beans, dried peas,
- macaroni and whole wheat spaghetti.
-
- How to get help
-
- "Seek and you shall find!" That's our principles here and will continue
- to be our motto whenever we need information about ourselves and our health.
- We have to find a place to start and follow up all the leads that we can
- develop until we arrive at the place where we can get the answers we need and
- have the right to know.
- You can start with the telephone book that you have at hand right now.
- Turn to the pages marked "community service numbers." (In some areas it may
- be labeled "human services.") Look under "health services." I'll bet you
- never knew some of these services existed. They represent starting points as
- we begin our "treasure hunt" to seek help. If the number we choose does not
- have ass the answers ask for a recommendation of another agency or another
- number to call. Perhaps there is an address where you can send a letter or
- request. DON'T GIVE UP! Keep your calls and letters going until you find
- what you are seeking.
- Another good place to start is your public library. It is loaded with
- books filled with information and addresses where you might find the answers
- to your special questions. To get you started and on your way, here are a few
- special names and numbers from my personal collection of resources:
-
-
- CANCER INFORMATION SERVICE: (800) 4-CANCER, (800) 638-6070 in Alaska
- only, (202) 636-5700 in the District of Columbia only, (808) 524-1234 in Oahu,
- Hawaii (neighbor islands can call collect) or write: Office of Cancer
- Communications, The National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Md., 20892. CIS will
- answer cancer-related questions from the public, cancer patients and families
- and health professionals. The CIS staff members do not diagnose cancer or
- recommend treatment for individual cases.
-
- AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY, 19 W. 56th St., New York, N.Y. 10019; (800)
- ACS-2345, (212) 736-3030 in New York City. Check your community telephone
- directory for a local division. The society offers counseling, educational
- materials, support groups, seminars and conferences and a newsletter.
-
- CANCER CARE INC. and THE NATIONAL CANCER FOUNDATION INC.--1180 Avenue of
- the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036; (212) 221-3300-- offer support groups,
- transportation, counseling, educational materials, seminars and conferences
- and a newsletter.
-
- AMC CANCER INFORMATION (800) 525-3777, provides the latest information on
- causes of cancer, prevention, methods of detection and diagnosis, treatment
- and treatment facilities, rehabilitation and counseling services. It's a
- service of the AMC Cancer Research Center, Denver.
-
- HILL-BURTON HOSPITAL FREE CARE, (800) 638-0742, (800) 492-0359 in
- Maryland only, provides information on hospitals participating in the
- Hill-Burton Free Area Program. A service of the Bureau of Health Care
- Delivery and Assistance, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
-
- NATIONAL SECOND SURGICAL OPINION PROGRAM HOTLINE, (800) 638-6833, (800)
- 492-6603 in Maryland only, helps consumers locate a nearby specialist for a
- second opinion in nonemergency surgery. It's a service of the Health Care
- Financing Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
-
- UNITED OSTOMY ASSOCIATION, 36 Executive Park, Suite 120, Irvine, Calif.,
- 92714; (714) 660-8624, stresses adjustment to living with an ostomy. Trained
- members visit ostomy patients to offer support and practical assistance.
- Publications describe ostomy care and management, anatomy and sexual aspects
- of living with an ostomy.
-
- DIGESTIVE DISEASES CLEARINGHOUSE, 1555 Wilson Blvd., Suite 600, Rosslyn,
- Va. 22209-2461; (703) 496-9707, provides services in three major areas:
- inquiry response and referral, publications development and resource
- co-ordination. A service of the National Institute of Arthritis, Diabetes and
- Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIADDK), National Institutes of Health, it
- works closely with more than 20 organizations to promote a wider understanding
- of digestive health and disease.
-
- AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY, 13 Elm St., P.O. Box
- 1565, Manchester, Mass., 01944; (508) 526-8330. This professional society
- furthers the knowledge of gastrointestinal disease through the use of
- endoscopic technique in clinical practice and research.
-
- SOCIETY OF AMERICAN GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPIC SURGEONS, Thomas
- Jefferson University Hospital, 111 S. 11th St., Philadelphia, Penn. 19107.
- SAGES is an organization of surgeons that promotes the concepts of
- gastrointestinal endoscopy as an integral part of surgery.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- This booklet has been researched by C.R. Shelton, with Robert Demarco,
- M.D., serving as contributing editor. Though all the information contained in
- the booklet is as up to date as I can make it, research in the field of the
- diagnosis and treatment of all types of cancer is continuing at a most rapid
- pace. Perhaps just over the horizon, not yet visible to us, lie the secrets
- of both cause and cure of these afflictions. Your physician remains the most
- vital and valid source of this knowledge and your first line of defense
- against any disease. Therefore, when you have read and understood all that
- has been written here, and when you have pursued your search for more
- information using the contacts found here, it is in consultation with your
- family physician that you will find the answers to the special questions that
- concern you, as a unique individual.
-
-
- A last word
-
- Really, there is no last word to this booklet or to the story of the
- fight against colorectal cancer and cancer disease in general. It's going on
- even as I write this. It is a battle in which every branch of science, and
- every aspect of society, must become allies and partners. Nothing is
- impossible, and no disease may remain incurable. French moralist Francois Duc
- de La Rochefoucald, who lived in the mid 1600's, once wrote: "Nothing is
- impossible; there are ways that lead to everything, and if we had sufficient
- will we should always have sufficient means. It is often for an excuse that
- we say things are impossible." Good words to read, understand and remember.
- For nothing is unattainable with work, diligence, a helping hand of good
- fortune, faith and, of course, prayer.
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- For additional copies of CANCERS OF THE COLON AND RECTUM, send $2.75 to
- CANCER, P.O. Box 4406, Orlando, Fla. 32802-4367. Make checks payable to
- Newspaperbooks. Multiple copy discounts are available.
-
- ----------------
-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
-