Are there any colon cancer survivors here?
Are there any colon cancer survivors here?
Liver Metastasis Remains a Major Threat to Cancer Survivors
Recent cases on headline news about liver metastasis such as Tony Snow’s recent diagnosis derived from his primary colon cancer, underscores the fact that liver metastasis is a major threat to cancer survivors. Although cancer rarely begins in the liver, it is often one of the first places where cancer comes back, through metastasis, in cancer survivors. This is primarily due to the liver serving as a primary organ with a very rich blood supply along with a unique microstructure that allows cancer cells to easily enter and hold on once arriving.
“In fact, about 80% of cancers in the liver derive from primary tumors at other sites within the body,” said Dr. Sujuan Ba, the Chief Science Officer at the National Foundation for Cancer Research (NFCR). Metastatic liver cancers mainly come from primary tumors in the colon, rectum, stomach, pancreas, ovary, breast and lung. When a liver cancer is the result of spreading from colon cancer, the prognosis is usually not optimistic: 5-year survival rates may plummet to as low as 10%.
Treatment of liver metastasis varies depending on the site of the original cancer, the extent of cancer spread to the liver and many other factors. If the metastatic cancer is restricted to one or a few discrete areas within the liver, surgical removal may provide a cure. In other cases, chemotherapy is often used and may produce a therapeutic response in 20% of liver cancer patients. In most cases however, the disease is currently not curable.
Researchers at NFCR believe that with the advancement of technology and ever-growing knowledge about this disease, major improvements in the treatment of colon and metastatic liver cancer are within reach.
NFCR is currently supporting multiple research projects that are aimed at providing hope against liver metastasis by targeting both the primary cancers and their metastasis. NFCR scientists I. Bernard Weinstein, M.D., at Columbia University, Rakesh Jain, Ph.D., at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Wei Zhang, Ph.D., at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, are exploring alternative routes to tackling primary colorectal cancer cells more effectively. This reduces the cancer cells chances of spreading to the liver and other vital organs. Their research has led to the identification of novel molecular targets, new biomarkers and more potent therapies for the treatment of primary colorectal cancer.
It is much more difficult to treat cancer after metastasis occurs. The good news is scientists at NFCR Center for Metastasis Research may have found some clues against the stealthy spread of cancer. Led by Center Director Danny Welch, Ph.D., researchers at this NFCR Center have discovered several “metastasis suppressors” that prevent cancer cells from growing in the distant sites of the body after they arrive. Metastasis suppressors have been shown to inhibit the spread of breast, prostate, ovarian cancers and melanoma (skin cancer).
About the National Foundation for Cancer Research
Since 1973, the National Foundation for Cancer Research (NFCR) has spent over 0 million funding basic science cancer research and public education relating to the prevention, treatment and cure of cancer. NFCR is about accelerating the pace of discovery from bench to bedside and to educating the public so that, together, we can achieve one of medicine’s greatest goals: curing cancer. For more visit www.liver-health.tk
About the Author
Donna LaCroix LIED about her Colon Cancer. Seen here dancing while….
Incoming search terms:
- is there any colon cancer surviver
- tony pace colon cancer
I have colorectal problems and the word cancer comes up although I've never been diagnosed with it yet. It's caused me to do some research. Colon cancer can be removed and a person can live with a colostomy. Not all, but many. I've also heard recently that cancer can be cured by breast milk. Look for a breast milk bank. I'm not kidding. I'm not trying to be gross or perverse. It fixes the immune system in such a way that it fights it. But he needs to have the diseased parts removed and just use breast milk and other alternative treatments to build the immune system to hopefully right what's left. I also read something about seaweed. Dont' give up. That's the worst thing that can be done. Be sure to be proactive and supportive and allow both hope and talk for cures and treatments and the future AND talk of closure and wills and resolution. He will have to deal with both possibilities. Remember we all die. Unfortunately. It drives me crazy. But we all die. If he does die at least he knows it's coming and can make a few preparations he normally wouldn't have thought of until much later. And everyone has a chance to tell him they love him and what his life has meant to them.
References :
There are survivors for every type of cancer and at every stage of cancer. Your brother in law needs to locate an oncologist who he can trust and who specializes in this type of disease. He needs someone who will not discourage him. He needs a positive attitude, courage, and determination. He needs everyone on his side as he fights this battle.
He needs all the information that he can handle . . not outdated information. Cancer research is ongoing, papers and new treatments come out monthly . . what may have been true about a disease last year may be totally different today. Be extremely careful about what you read concerning 'statistics' as they do not apply to individuals.
Here are a few places to start the research process:
Colon Cancer Alliance
http://www.ccalliance.org
Colon Cancer Discussion List
http://listserv.acor.org/archives/colon.html
NCCN: Colon and Rectal Cancer Clinical Guidelines
http://www.nccn.org/patients/patient_gls/_english/_colon/1_introduction.asp
Treatment guidelines for patients
http://www.nccn.org/patients/patient_gls/_english/pdf/NCCN%20Colorectal%20Guidelines.pdf
American Cancer Society:Colon Cancer Survivor Proves Doctors Wrong
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/FPS/content/FPS_1_Colon_Cancer_Survivor_Proves_Doctors_Wrong.asp
Remember, do not listen to the 'terminators', there is ALWAYS hope.
References :
Experience. Teen son diagnosed with stage IV abdominal sarcoma.