Rectal Cancer Treatments
- Colectomy is surgical removal of the part of the colon where the cancer is located, along with adjacent healthy tissue and lymph noses.
- Colostomy is a surgical procedure that creates an opening in the abdomen for the large intestine to be connected to a bag that collects solid waste. It is performed when cancer grows on the opening of the rectum.
- According to the Mayo Clinic, palliative surgery can be performed to lessen the symptoms and pain from advanced rectal cancer. This type of surgery does not remove the cancerous growths.
- Chemotherapy is the use of drugs that kill fast growing cancerous and healthy cells throughout the body and is used with surgery for metastatic rectal cancer.
- Targeted drug therapy is used to treat advanced rectal cancer and works by cutting off the blood supply to the tumor and reducing the ability of cancer cells to reproduce.
- External beams of radiation can be directed at the rectum to kill cancerous cells. Radiation is usually used together with chemotherapy and surgery.
- External beams of radiation can be directed at the rectum to kill cancerous cells and is usually used together with chemotherapy and surgery.