|
While colorectal cancer is often found after symptoms appear,
most people with early colon or rectal cancer have no symptoms.
Symptoms usually appear only with more advanced disease. This is why
getting the recommended screening tests before any symptoms develop is
so important.
If your doctor finds something suspicious during a screening
exam, or if you have any of the symptoms of colorectal cancer described
below, your doctor will probably recommend exams and tests to find the
cause.
Screening (if you don't have any symptoms)
Screening tests are used to spot a disease early. Screening
for colorectal cancer may find it at an earlier stage, when it is more
likely to be curable. Screening tests can also help prevent cancer by
finding polyps that can be removed before they become cancerous.
Screening tests are described in detail in the section, "Should
I be tested for colon and rectum cancer?"
If your doctor finds something suspicious during a screening
exam, you may need to have more tests to help make a diagnosis. These
tests are part of a process called a diagnostic workup.
If you do have symptoms
Symptoms such as changes in bowel movements, bloating, or
blood in the stool can have many causes. These can range from
relatively minor problems, such as infections or hemorrhoids, to more
serious conditions such as colitis (inflammation of the colon) or even
cancer.
If you have any of the symptoms listed below, please see your
doctor. He or she will take a complete medical history, do a physical
exam, and may order other tests to find the cause of your symptoms.
Signs and symptoms of colorectal cancer
A sign is
something you see that indicates something is wrong and that you may
have a disease. Blood in the stool, for example, is a sign. A symptom is usually
something you feel or have that suggests you may have a disease. Pain
in the abdomen is a symptom.
If you have any of the following you should check with your
doctor for prompt diagnosis and treatment:
- a change in bowel habits such as diarrhea, constipation, or
narrowing of the stool that lasts for more than a few days
- a feeling that you need to have a bowel movement that is
not relieved by doing so
- rectal bleeding, dark stools, or blood in the stool (often,
though, the stool will look normal)
- cramping or abdominal (stomach area) pain
Most of these symptoms are more likely to be caused by
conditions other than colorectal cancer, such as infection,
hemorrhoids, or inflammatory bowel disease. Still, if you have any of
these problems, it's important to see your doctor right away so the
cause can be found and treated, if needed.
Diagnostic workup for colorectal cancer
Medical history and physical exam
If you have any signs or symptoms that suggest you might have
colorectal cancer, your doctor will want to take a complete medical
history to check for symptoms and risk factors, including your family
history.
As part of a physical exam, your doctor will carefully feel
your abdomen for masses or enlarged organs, and also examine the rest
of your body. Your doctor may also perform a digital rectal exam (DRE).
During this test, the doctor inserts a lubricated, gloved finger into
the rectum to feel for any abnormal areas.
Blood tests
Your doctor may also order certain blood tests to help
determine if you have colorectal cancer.
Complete blood
count (CBC): Your doctor may order a complete blood count
to see if you have anemia (too few red blood cells). Some people with
colorectal cancer become anemic because of prolonged bleeding from the
tumor. You may also have a blood test of your liver function, because
colorectal cancer can spread to the liver and cause abnormalities.
Tumor markers:
Colorectal cancer sometimes produces substances, such as
carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and CA 19-9, that are released into the
bloodstream. Blood tests for these "tumor markers" are used most often
with other tests to follow-up patients who already have been diagnosed
with or treated for colorectal cancer. They may help show how well
treatment is working or provide an early warning of a cancer that has
returned.
These tumor markers are not used as screening tests to find
cancer in people who have never had a cancer and appear to be healthy,
because the tests can't tell for sure whether or not someone has
colorectal cancer. Tumor marker levels can be normal in a person who
has cancer and can be abnormal for reasons other than cancer. For
example, higher levels may be present in the blood of some people with
ulcerative colitis, non-cancerous tumors of the intestines, or some
types of liver disease or chronic lung disease. Smoking can also raise
CEA levels.
Tests to look for colorectal polyps or
cancer
If symptoms or the results of the physical exam or blood tests
suggest that colorectal cancer might be present, your doctor may
recommend more tests. This might include endoscopic tests such as
sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy, or imaging tests such as a barium enema
(lower GI series), double-contrast barium enema, or CT colonography
(virtual colonoscopy). Most of these tests are described in detail in
the section, "Should
I be tested for colon and rectum cancer?"
Biopsy:
Usually if a suspected colorectal cancer is found by any diagnostic
test, it is biopsied during a colonoscopy. In a biopsy, the doctor
removes a small piece of tissue with a special instrument passed
through the scope. Although there may be some bleeding afterward, this
usually stops after a short time. Less often, part of the colon might
need to be surgically removed to make the diagnosis.
Lab tests of
specimens: Biopsy specimens (from colonoscopy or surgery)
are sent to the lab where a pathologist, a doctor trained to diagnose
cancer and other diseases in tissue samples, looks at them under a
microscope. Although other tests may suggest that colorectal cancer is
present, the only way to determine this for certain is to look at a
specimen under a microscope.
Other lab tests may also be done on biopsy specimens to help
better classify the cancer. Doctors may look for specific gene changes
in the cancer cells that might affect how they are best treated. For
example, many doctors now test the cells for changes in the K-ras gene.
This gene is mutated in about 4 out of 10 colorectal cancers. Cancers
with these mutations do not benefit from treatment with certain
anti-cancer drugs such as cetuximab (Erbitux) and panitumumab
(Vectibix).
Imaging tests
Imaging tests use sound waves, x-rays, magnetic fields, or
radioactive substances to create pictures of the inside of your body.
Imaging tests may be done for a number of reasons, including to help
find out whether a suspicious area might be cancerous, to learn how far
cancer may have spread, and to help determine if treatment has been
effective.
Computed
tomography (CT or CAT) scan: The CT scan is an x-ray test
that produces detailed cross-sectional images of your body. Instead of
taking one picture, like a regular x-ray, a CT scanner takes many
pictures as it rotates around you while you lie on a table. A computer
then combines these pictures into images of slices of the part of your
body being studied. Unlike a regular x-ray, a CT scan creates detailed
images of the soft tissues in the body. This test can help tell if
colon cancer has spread into your liver or other organs.
Before the scan, you may be asked to drink a contrast solution
and/or get an intravenous (IV) injection of a contrast dye that helps
better outline abnormal areas in the body. You may need an IV line
through which the contrast dye is injected. The injection can cause
some flushing (redness and warm feeling). Some people are allergic and
get hives or, rarely, more serious reactions like trouble breathing and
low blood pressure. Be sure to tell the doctor if you have ever had a
reaction to any contrast material used for x-rays.
CT scans take longer than regular x-rays. You need to lie
still on a table while they are being done. During the test, the table
moves in and out of the scanner, a ring-shaped machine that completely
surrounds the table. You might feel a bit confined by the ring you have
to lie in while the pictures are being taken.
In recent years, spiral
CT (also known as helical CT) has become available in
many medical centers. This type of CT scan uses a faster machine. The
scanner part of the machine rotates around the body continuously,
allowing doctors to collect the images much more quickly than with
standard CT. This lowers the chance of blurred images occurring as a
result of breathing motion. It also lowers the dose of radiation
received during the test. The biggest advantage may be that the image
slices are thinner, which yields more detailed pictures and allows
doctors to look at suspicious areas from different angles.
Spiral CT with portography
(looks specifically at the portal vein -- the large vein leading into
the liver from the intestine. In this test, contrast material is
injected into veins that lead to the liver, to help look for metastases
from colorectal cancer to that organ.
CT-guided needle
biopsy: CT scans can also be used to precisely guide a
biopsy needle into a suspected tumor or metastasis. For this procedure,
the patient remains on the CT scanning table, while a radiologist
advances a biopsy needle through the skin and toward the location of
the mass. CT scans are repeated until the doctors are confident that
the needle is within the mass. A fine-needle biopsy sample (tiny
fragment of tissue) or a core needle biopsy sample (a thin cylinder of
tissue about ½ inch long and less than 1/8 inch in diameter)
is then removed and looked at under a microscope.
CT colonography
(virtual colonoscopy): CT scans can also be used to
perform virtual colonoscopy. This test requires the same type of
preparation (cleansing of stool from the colon) as is needed before
colonoscopy. Before the scan is done, the colon is inflated with air
through a soft flexible tube that is inserted into the rectum so that
it can be viewed more clearly; this stretches the colon and can cause
some discomfort.
Spiral CT of the abdomen is then done. The thin images it
obtains can be combined to create two- and three-dimensional views of
the colon and rectum. If abnormalities are detected, a follow-up
colonoscopy will be needed to take tissue samples of the abnormal
areas.
Ultrasound:
Ultrasound uses sound waves and their echoes to produce a picture of
internal organs or masses. A small microphone-like instrument called a
transducer emits sound waves and picks up the echoes as they bounce off
body tissues. The echoes are converted by a computer into a black and
white image that is displayed on a computer screen. This test is
painless and does not expose you to radiation.
Abdominal ultrasound can be used to look for tumors in your
liver, gallbladder, pancreas, or elsewhere in your abdomen, although it
can't look for tumors of the colon. For the exam, you simply lie on a
table and a technician moves the transducer along the skin over the
part of your body being examined. Usually, the skin is first lubricated
with gel.
Two special types of ultrasound exams are sometimes used to
evaluate colon and rectal cancers.
Endorectal
ultrasound uses a special transducer that can be inserted
directly into the rectum. This test is used to see how far through the
rectal wall a cancer may have penetrated and whether it has spread to
nearby organs or tissues such as lymph nodes.
Intraoperative
ultrasound is done during surgery after the surgeon has
opened the abdominal cavity. The transducer can be placed against the
surface of the liver, making this test very useful in detecting the
spread of colorectal cancer to the liver.
Magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) scan: Like CT scans, MRI scans
provide detailed images of soft tissues in the body. But MRI scans use
radio waves and strong magnets instead of x-rays. The energy from the
radio waves is absorbed by the body and then released in a pattern
formed by the type of body tissue and by certain diseases. A computer
translates the pattern into a very detailed image of parts of the body.
A contrast material called gadolinium is often injected into a vein
before the scan to better see details.
MRI scans are a little more uncomfortable than CT scans.
First, they take longer -- often up to an hour. Second, you have to lie
inside a narrow tube, which is confining and can upset people with
claustrophobia (a fear of enclosed spaces). Newer, more open MRI
machines can sometimes help with this if needed. The machine also makes
buzzing and clicking noises that you may find disturbing. Some centers
provide earplugs to help block this noise out.
MRI scans are sometimes useful in looking at abnormal areas in
the liver that might be due to cancer spread. They can also help
determine the extent of rectal cancers. To improve the accuracy of the
test, some doctors use endorectal MRI. For this test the doctor places
a probe, called an endorectal coil, inside the rectum. This must stay
in place for 30 to 45 minutes during the test and can be uncomfortable.
Chest x-ray: This
test may be done after colorectal cancer has been diagnosed to see if
cancer has spread to the lungs.
Positron
emission tomography (PET) scan: For a PET scan, you
receive an injection of a substance that contains a form of radioactive
sugar (known as fluorodeoxyglucose or FDG) into the blood. The amount
of radioactivity used is very low. Because cancer cells in the body are
growing rapidly, they absorb large amounts of the radioactive sugar. A
special camera can then create a picture of areas of radioactivity in
the body. The picture is not finely detailed like a CT or MRI scan, but
it provides helpful information about your whole body.
A PET scan can help give the doctor a better idea of whether
an abnormal area seen on another imaging test is a tumor or not. If you
have already been diagnosed with cancer, your doctor may use this test
to see if the cancer has spread to lymph nodes or other parts of the
body. A PET scan can also be useful if your doctor thinks the cancer
may have spread but doesn't know where.
Some newer machines are able to perform both a PET and CT scan
at the same time (PET/CT scan). This allows the doctor to compare areas
of higher radioactivity on the PET with the more detailed appearance of
that area on the CT.
Angiography:
This is an x-ray procedure for looking at blood vessels. Contrast
medium, or dye, is injected into an artery before x-ray images are
taken. The dye outlines the blood vessels on x-ray pictures.
Angiography can be useful in showing the arteries that supply
blood to tumors in the liver. This can help surgeons decide whether a
cancer can be removed and if so, it can help in planning the operation.
Angiography can be uncomfortable because the radiologist who
does the procedure has to put a small catheter (a flexible hollow tube)
into the artery leading to the liver to inject the dye. Usually the
catheter is put into an artery in your inner thigh and threaded up into
the liver artery. A local anesthetic is often used to numb the area
before inserting the catheter. Then the dye is injected quickly to
outline all the vessels while the x-rays are being taken.
Angiography may also be done with a CT scanner (CT
angiography) or an MRI scanner (MR angiography). These techniques give
information about the blood vessels in the liver without the need for a
catheter, although you may still need an IV line so that a contrast dye
can be injected into the bloodstream during the imaging.
After the tests are completed
After your doctor has completed all the tests needed to make a
diagnosis, he or she will discuss the findings with you. If a diagnosis
of colorectal cancer is confirmed by a biopsy, the next step will be to
find out the extent of the cancer by a process that doctors call
staging the disease. If you would like information on how colorectal
cancer is staged, please see the section "After
diagnosis: Staging your colon and rectal cancer."
You are likely to have many questions as well as many
uncomfortable feelings when you first learn that you have colorectal
cancer. The information in "After
diagnosis: Staging your colon and rectal cancer" can help
answer your questions and suggest ways to cope with the feelings you
may have.
You may also want to read the separate American Cancer Society
document, Choosing a Doctor and Hospital.
Last Medical Review: 05/21/2009 Last Revised: 05/21/2009
|