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Colorectal Cancer: A Potential
Killer That Can Be Beaten
Excerpt by
Amanda Gardner, HealthScoutNews
Colorectal cancer is the
second-leading cancer killer in the United States, claiming more
than 57,000 lives every year.
Yet, the vast majority of these
deaths could be prevented.
How? Through regular screening
by a medical professional.
Because March is National Colorectal
Cancer Awareness Month, 50 organizations have joined forces to
spread the message that screening measures -- plus a healthy lifestyle
-- can help stop this killer in its tracks.
"People are great procrastinators,
[but] a screening test will help save your life," says Dr.
Sidney Winawer, co-chairman of the International Digestive Cancer
Alliance and a professor of medicine at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center in New York City.
While lifestyle is important --
specifically, regular exercise combined with a balanced, healthy
diet that includes plenty of fruits and vegetables and fewer animal
fats -- screening is the proven key to prevention.
Virtually all colorectal cancers
start as polyps, or abnormal growths, so the key is to find the
polyps before they turn malignant.
"The National Polyp Study,
an Italian study and a University of Minnesota study have shown
that removing polyps prevents colon cancer," Winawer says.
When it comes to spotting potentially
dangerous polyps, the technique of choice is the colonoscopy,
although other promising tools are under review. And Medicare
now pays for colonoscopies, an indication of just how seriously
the medical establishment is taking the issue of prevention and
early diagnosis of colorectal cancer.
New guidelines issued in February
by the U.S. Multisociety Task Force on Colorectal Cancer state
that all men and women over age 50 who have no symptoms and no
family history of colorectal cancer should have a colonoscopy.
People with a family history need to be screened starting at an
earlier age.
The procedure, which usually takes
half an hour and is done under mild sedation, involves the insertion
of a long, flexible tube with a camera mounted on the end up through
the rectum and on into the colon, or large intestine. The camera
takes pictures and transmits them outside the body.
Perhaps the best thing about a
colonoscopy is that it's "one-stop shopping," says Winawer,
lead author of the new guidelines.
"You can do screening, diagnosis
and treatment by removing the polyps all in one examination,"
he adds.
The downside of the procedure is
the preparation, which involves taking potent laxatives to make
sure the colon is completely clear.
"The preparation is not pleasant,
but I think it's a small price to pay for one's life," Winawer
says.
In the future, patients may benefit
from a "virtual colonoscopy," the procedure newswoman
Katie Couric underwent on the NBC "Today" show last
March. Less invasive than a conventional colonoscopy, a virtual
colonoscopy uses a computer assisted tomography (CAT) scanner
to survey the colon from outside the body.
However, a virtual colonoscopy
requires the same preparation as a conventional colonoscopy, is
not able to perform biopsies or remove polyps, and may or may
not be as effective as the traditional treatment.
"It's potentially promising,
but we don't know how accurate it is yet," Winawer says.
Another promising screening method
under investigation is DNA testing that hunts for genetic mutations
in stool samples that might indicate the presence of cancer or
precancerous growths.
"Right now, the pick-up rate
[for spotting cancerous polyps] is about 50 percent and it's a
very complex laboratory assay that's required," Winawer says.
"It's not generally available nor is it approved for general
screening use."
Taking a chapter from Fantastic
Voyage, researchers have also developed a tiny capsule containing
a camera. The capsule is swallowed as if it were a regular pill,
then the camera takes pictures as it travels through the digestive
tract. The video transmittals are relayed to doctors viewing a
computer monitor on the outside. The procedure is only FDA-approved
for the small intestine, which is located above the large intestine.
"It works well for the small
bowel [small intestine], but it doesn't work well for the colon
[large intestine]," says Dr. David Beck, chairman of the
department of colon and rectal surgery at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation
in New Orleans. "It's not as good a picture of the colon
as the scope."
Again, the miniature camera would
not be able to perform a biopsy or remove a troublesome growth.
"You'd have to go back in,
but that may be a way to see who really needs a colonoscopy,"
says Dr. Michael Bouvet, a surgical oncologist at the Rebecca
and John Moores University of California San Diego Cancer Center.
"These are all not ready for prime time."
There have also been advances even
when screening does detect cancer.
Surgery to remove cancerous portions
of the colon or rectum is still the primary treatment. "If
the cancer is caught early, it's very curable," Beck says.
"If the tumor is more advanced, we may add some additional
things like radiation or chemotherapy."
If a tumor is found in the rectum,
physicians will often do chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before
surgically removing it. This is in an effort to preserve the sphincter
at the entrance of the rectum so the patient can continue with
normal bowel movements, Bouvet says.
"The big message really is:
Please don't wait for something like this down the road,"
Winawer says. "Save your life today by going in for a screening
test that's available today."
More information
Visit the Cancer
Research and Prevention Foundation for more on National Colorectal
Cancer Awareness Month.
To learn more about colorectal
cancer, visit the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, the National
Cancer Institute or the American
Cancer Society.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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