Stomach Cancer: Treatment Introduction
Learning about your treatment choices
There are different treatment choices for stomach cancer. Which may work best for
you? It depends on many things, such as:
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The tumor's size and location
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Test results
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Stage of the disease
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Your overall health
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Your age
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Your personal needs and concerns
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What side effects you find acceptable
You may also want to know how you’ll feel and function after treatment, including
if you’ll have to change your normal activities.
Your healthcare provider is the best person to answer your questions. They can tell
you what your treatment choices are, how well they’re expected to work, and what the
risks and side effects are. Your provider may advise a certain treatment plan. It
may include different types of treatment. Or they may offer more than one, and ask
you to decide which one you’d like to use. It can be hard to make this decision. So
it's important to take the time you need to make the best decision.
Types of treatment for stomach cancer
Here is an overview of the treatment choices for stomach cancer:
Surgery
This is the most common treatment for stomach cancer. The goal is to remove the entire
tumor and any cancer cells that may have spread to nearby tissue. If the cancer is
only in your stomach, surgery may be all that you need. Or you may have surgery before
or after another treatment is used to shrink the tumor first.
Radiation therapy
This treatment uses high-energy beams of X-rays or particles to kill cancer cells.
The main goal of radiation is to kill cancer cells and reduce the chance the cancer
will come back (recurrence). Sometimes it’s used to reduce the symptoms of cancer.
These can include pain, blockages, or bleeding.
Chemotherapy
The goal of chemotherapy (chemo) might be to shrink a tumor, destroy cancer cells,
ease symptoms from the cancer, or help prevent cancer recurrence. Chemo is often used
for early-stage stomach cancer, which has not spread. It may be the main treatment
if the cancer has spread beyond the stomach to other parts of the body. Chemo can
be used before surgery (neoadjuvant therapy). Or it may be given after surgery (adjuvant
therapy). Chemo may be combined with radiation therapy (chemoradiation).
Targeted therapy
These are medicines that target stomach cancer cells rather than all stomach cells.
These medicines work differently from regular chemo medicines. They only work if your
cancer cells have particular gene mutations or express a protein that one of the current
medicines can target. Your healthcare provider will look for biomarkers in your tumor
to see if you are a candidate for targeted therapy.
Immunotherapy
This treatment uses medicines to help your body's immune system find and kill cancer
cells. Immunotherapy may be given alone or with other types of treatment. It may be
a choice for more advanced stomach cancer.
Making treatment decisions
Your healthcare provider may advise that you have more than one of these types of
treatment. This is sometimes called combination therapy. Newer types of treatment
may be available only through a research study (clinical trial). Talk with your provider
about what clinical trials may be a choice for you.
Deciding on the best plan may take some time. Talk with your healthcare provider about
how much time you can take to explore your choices. You may want to get another opinion
before deciding on your treatment plan. Your provider can help you with this. You
may also want to include your family and friends in this process.