Stomach Cancer
Stomach Cancer
Stomach Cancer
What is cancer?
The body is made up of trillions of living cells. Normal body cells grow, divide to make
new cells, and die in an orderly fashion. During the early years of a persons life, normal
cells divide faster to allow the person to grow. After the person becomes an adult, most
cells divide only to replace worn-out or dying cells or to repair injuries.
Cancer begins when cells in a part of the body start to grow out of control. There are
many kinds of cancer, but they all start because of out-of-control growth of abnormal
cells.
Cancer cell growth is different from normal cell growth. Instead of dying, cancer cells
continue to grow and form new, abnormal cells. Cancer cells can also invade (grow into)
other tissues, something that normal cells cannot do. Growing out of control and invading
other tissues are what makes a cell a cancer cell.
Cells become cancer cells because of damage to DNA. DNA is in every cell and directs
all its actions. In a normal cell, when DNA gets damaged the cell either repairs the
damage or the cell dies. In cancer cells, the damaged DNA is not repaired, but the cell
doesnt die like it should. Instead, this cell goes on making new cells that the body does
not need. These new cells will all have the same damaged DNA as the first cell does.
People can inherit damaged DNA, but most DNA damage is caused by mistakes that
happen while the normal cell is reproducing or by something in our environment.
Sometimes the cause of the DNA damage is something obvious, like cigarette smoking.
But often no clear cause is found.
In most cases the cancer cells form a tumor. Some cancers, like leukemia, rarely form
tumors. Instead, these cancer cells involve the blood and blood-forming organs and
circulate through other tissues where they grow.
Cancer cells often travel to other parts of the body, where they begin to grow and form
new tumors that replace normal tissue. This process is called metastasis. It happens when
the cancer cells get into the bloodstream or lymph vessels of our body.
No matter where a cancer may spread, it is always named and treated based on the place
where it started. For example, breast cancer that has spread to the liver is still breast
cancer, not liver cancer. Likewise, prostate cancer that has spread to the bone is still
prostate cancer, not bone cancer.
Different types of cancer can behave very differently. For example, lung cancer and
breast cancer are very different diseases. They grow at different rates and respond to
different treatments. That is why people with cancer need treatment that is aimed at their
particular kind of cancer.
Not all tumors are cancerous. Tumors that arent cancer are called benign. Benign tumors
can cause problems they can grow very large and press on healthy organs and tissues.
But they cannot grow into (invade) other tissues. Because they cant invade, they also
cant spread to other parts of the body (metastasize). These tumors are almost never life
threatening.
The stomach
After food is chewed and swallowed, it enters the esophagus, a tube that carries food
through the neck and chest to the stomach. The esophagus joins the stomach at the
gastroesophageal (GE) junction, which is just beneath the diaphragm (the thin sheet of
breathing muscle under the lungs). The stomach is a sac-like organ that holds food and
starts to digest it by secreting gastric juice. The food and gastric juice are mixed and then
emptied into the first part of the small intestine called the duodenum.
Some people use the word stomach to refer to the area of the body between the chest and
the pelvic area. The medical term for this area is the abdomen. For instance, some people
with pain in this area would say they have a stomachache, when in fact the pain could
be coming from the appendix, small intestine, colon (large intestine), or other organs in
the area. Doctors would call this symptom abdominal pain, because the stomach is only
one of many organs in the abdomen.
Stomach cancer should not be confused with other cancers that can occur in the abdomen,
like cancer of the colon (large intestine), liver, pancreas, or small intestine because these
cancers may have different symptoms, different outlooks, and different treatments.
Other organs next to the stomach include the colon, liver, spleen, small intestine, and
pancreas.
The stomach wall has 5 layers:
The innermost layer is the mucosa. This is where stomach acid and digestive enzymes
are made. Most stomach cancers start in this layer.
Next is a supporting layer called the submucosa.
Outside of this is the muscularis propria, a thick layer of muscle that moves and
mixes the stomach contents.
The outer 2 layers, the subserosa and the outermost serosa, wrap the stomach.
The layers are important in determining the stage (extent) of the cancer and in helping to
determine a persons prognosis (outlook). As a cancer grows from the mucosa into deeper
layers, the stage becomes more advanced and the prognosis is not as good.
as cancers of the esophagus. A cancer that starts in the cardia of the stomach but then
grows into the GE junction is also staged and treated like a cancer of the esophagus. (For
more information, see our document Esophagus Cancer.)
Stomach cancers can spread (metastasize) in different ways. They can grow through the
wall of the stomach and invade nearby organs. They can also spread to the lymph vessels
and nearby lymph nodes. Lymph nodes are bean-sized structures that help fight
infections. The stomach has a very rich network of lymph vessels and nodes. As the
stomach cancer becomes more advanced, it can travel through the bloodstream and
spread to organs such as the liver, lungs, and bones. If cancer has spread to the lymph
nodes or to other organs, the patients outlook is not as good.
Adenocarcinoma
About 90% to 95% of cancers of the stomach are adenocarcinomas. When the term
stomach cancer or gastric cancer is used, it almost always refers to an adenocarcinoma.
These cancers develop from the cells that form the innermost lining of the stomach
(known as the mucosa).
Lymphoma
These are cancers of the immune system tissue that are sometimes found in the wall of
the stomach. About 4% of stomach cancers are lymphomas. The treatment and outlook
depend on the type of lymphoma. For more detailed information, see our document NonHodgkin Lymphoma.
Carcinoid tumor
These are tumors that start in hormone-making cells of the stomach. Most of these tumors
do not spread to other organs. About 3% of stomach cancers are carcinoid tumors. These
tumors are discussed in more detail in our document Gastrointestinal Carcinoid Tumors.
Other cancers
Other types of cancer, such as squamous cell carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, and
leiomyosarcoma, can also start in the stomach, but these cancers are very rare.
The information in the remainder of this document refers only to adenocarcinoma
of the stomach.
But risk factors dont tell us everything. Having a risk factor, or even several risk factors,
does not mean that you will get the disease. And many people who get the disease may
have few or no known risk factors.
Scientists have found several risk factors that make a person more likely to get stomach
cancer. Some of these can be controlled, but others cannot.
Gender
Stomach cancer is more common in men than in women.
Age
There is a sharp increase in stomach cancer rates in people over the age of 50. Most
people diagnosed with stomach cancer are between their late 60s and 80s.
Ethnicity
In the United States, stomach cancer is more common in Hispanic Americans, African
Americans, and Asian/Pacific Islanders than it is in non-Hispanic whites.
Geography
Worldwide, stomach cancer is more common in Japan, China, Southern and Eastern
Europe, and South and Central America. This disease is less common in Northern and
Western Africa, South Central Asia, and North America.
Stomach lymphoma
People who have had a certain type of lymphoma of the stomach known as mucosaassociated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma have an increased risk of getting
adenocarcinoma of the stomach. This is probably because MALT lymphoma of the
stomach is caused by infection with H pylori bacteria.
Diet
An increased risk of stomach cancer is seen in people with diets that have large amounts
of smoked foods, salted fish and meat, and pickled vegetables. Nitrates and nitrites are
substances commonly found in cured meats. They can be converted by certain bacteria,
such as H pylori, into compounds that have been shown to cause stomach cancer in lab
animals.
On the other hand, eating lots of fresh fruits and vegetables appears to lower the risk of
stomach cancer. (See Can stomach cancer be prevented?)
Tobacco use
Smoking increases stomach cancer risk, particularly for cancers of the upper portion of
the stomach near the esophagus. The rate of stomach cancer is about doubled in smokers.
Pernicious anemia
Certain cells in the stomach lining normally make a substance called intrinsic factor (IF)
that we need to absorb vitamin B12 from foods. People without enough IF may end up
with a vitamin B12 deficiency, which affects the bodys ability to make new red blood
cells and can cause other problems as well. This condition is called pernicious anemia.
Along with anemia (too few red blood cells), people with this disease have an increased
risk of stomach cancer.
Type A blood
Blood type groups refer to certain substances that are normally present on the surface of
red blood cells and some other types of cells. These groups are important in matching
blood for transfusions. For unknown reasons, people with type A blood have a higher risk
of getting stomach cancer.
Li-Fraumeni syndrome
People with this syndrome have an increased risk of several types of cancer, including
developing stomach cancer at a relatively young age. Li-Fraumeni syndrome is caused by
a mutation in the TP53 gene.
Certain occupations
Workers in the coal, metal, and rubber industries seem to have a higher risk of getting
stomach cancer.
Most of the gene changes that lead to stomach cancer occur after birth. Some of these
changes might be caused by risk factors such as H pylori infection or tobacco use. But
other gene changes may just be random events that sometimes happen inside cells,
without having an external cause.
Aspirin use
Using aspirin or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen
or naproxen, seems to lower the risk of stomach cancer. These medicines can also lower
the risk of developing colon polyps and colon cancer. But they can also cause serious
(and even life-threatening) internal bleeding and other potential health risks in some
people.
Most doctors consider any reduced cancer risk an added benefit for patients who take
these drugs for other reasons, such as to treat arthritis. But doctors do not routinely
recommend taking NSAIDs specifically to prevent stomach cancer. Studies have not yet
determined for which patients the benefits of lowering cancer risk would outweigh the
risks of bleeding complications.
Upper endoscopy
Upper endoscopy (also called esophagogastroduodenoscopy or EGD) is the main test
used to find stomach cancer. It may be used when someone has certain risk factors or
when signs and symptoms suggest this disease may be present.
During this test, the doctor passes an endoscope, which is a thin, flexible, lighted tube
with a small video camera on the end, down your throat. This lets the doctor see the
lining of your esophagus, stomach, and first part of the small intestine. If abnormal areas
are seen, biopsies (tissue samples) can be taken using instruments passed through the
endoscope. The tissue samples are sent to a lab, where they are looked at under a
microscope to see if cancer is present.
When seen through an endoscope, stomach cancer can look like an ulcer, a mushroomshaped or protruding mass, or diffuse, flat, thickened areas of mucosa known as linitis
plastica. Unfortunately, the stomach cancers in hereditary diffuse gastric cancer
syndrome often cannot be seen during endoscopy.
Endoscopy can also be used as part of a special imaging test known as endoscopic
ultrasound, which is described below.
This test is usually done after you are given medication to make you sleepy (sedation). If
sedation is used, you will need someone to take you home (not just a cab).
Endoscopic ultrasound
Ultrasound uses sound waves to produce images of organs such as the stomach. During a
standard ultrasound, a wand-shaped probe called a transducer is placed on the skin. It
gives off sound waves and detects the echoes as they bounce off internal organs. The
pattern of echoes is processed by a computer to produce a black and white image on a
screen.
In endoscopic ultrasound (EUS), a small transducer is placed on the tip of an endoscope.
While you are sedated, the endoscope is passed down the throat and into the stomach.
This lets the transducer rest directly on the wall of the stomach where the cancer is. It lets
the doctor look at the layers of the stomach wall, as well as the nearby lymph nodes and
other structures just outside the stomach. The picture quality is better than a standard
ultrasound because of the shorter distance the sound waves have to travel.
EUS is most useful in seeing how far a cancer may have spread into the wall of the
stomach, to nearby tissues, and to nearby lymph nodes. It can also be used to help guide a
needle into a suspicious area to get a tissue sample (EUS-guided needle biopsy).
Biopsy
Your doctor may suspect cancer if an abnormal-looking area is seen on endoscopy or an
imaging test, but the only way to tell for sure if it is really cancer is by doing a biopsy.
During a biopsy, the doctor removes a sample of the abnormal area.
Biopsies to check for stomach cancer are most often obtained during upper endoscopy. If
the doctor sees any abnormal areas in the stomach lining during the endoscopy,
instruments can be passed down the endoscope to biopsy them.
Some stomach cancers are deep within the stomach wall, which can make them hard to
biopsy with standard endoscopy. If the doctor suspects cancer might be deeper in the
stomach wall, endoscopic ultrasound can be used to guide a thin, hollow needle into the
wall of the stomach to get a biopsy sample.
Biopsies may also be taken from areas of possible cancer spread, such as nearby lymph
nodes or suspicious areas in other parts of the body.
Imaging tests
Imaging tests use x-rays, magnetic fields, sound waves, 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
To help determine if treatment has been effective
done. CT scans take longer than regular x-rays, and you might feel a bit confined by the
ring while the pictures are being taken.
CT scans show the stomach fairly clearly and often can confirm the location of the
cancer. CT scans can also show the organs near the stomach, such as the liver, as well as
lymph nodes and distant organs where cancer might have spread. The CT scan can help
determine the extent (stage) of the cancer and whether surgery may be a good treatment
option.
CT-guided needle biopsy: CT scans can also be used to guide a biopsy needle into a
suspected area of cancer spread. The patient remains on the CT scanning table while a
doctor moves a biopsy needle through the skin toward the mass. CT scans are repeated
until 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) is then removed and looked at
under a microscope.
Some machines can do both a PET and CT scan at the same time (PET/CT scan). This
lets the doctor compare areas of higher radioactivity on the PET with the more detailed
appearance of that area on the CT. PET/CT may be more helpful than PET alone for
stomach cancer. This can help show if the cancer has spread beyond the stomach to other
parts of the body, in which case surgery might not be a good treatment.
Chest x-ray
This test can help find out if the cancer has spread to the lungs. It might also determine if
there are any serious lung or heart diseases present. This test is not needed if a CT scan of
the chest has been done.
You can read more about imaging tests in our document Imaging (Radiology) Tests.
Other tests
Laparoscopy
If this procedure is done, it is usually only after stomach cancer has already been found.
Although CT or MRI scans can create detailed pictures of the inside of the body, they can
miss some tumors, especially if they are very small. Doctors might do a laparoscopy
before any other surgery to help confirm a stomach cancer is still only in the stomach and
can be removed completely with surgery. It may also be done before chemotherapy
and/or radiation if these are planned before surgery.
This procedure is done in an operating room with the patient under general anesthesia (in
a deep sleep). A laparoscope (a thin, flexible tube) is inserted through a small surgical
opening in the patients side. The laparoscope has a small video camera on its end, which
sends pictures of the inside of the abdomen to a TV screen. Doctors can look closely at
the surfaces of the organs and nearby lymph nodes, or even take small samples of tissue.
If it doesnt look like the cancer has spread, sometimes the doctor will wash the
abdomen with saline (salt water). The fluid (called peritoneal washings) is then removed
and checked to see if it contains cancer cells. If it does, the cancer has spread, even if the
spread couldnt be seen.
Sometimes laparoscopy is combined with ultrasound to give a better picture of the
cancer.
Lab tests
When looking for signs of stomach cancer, a doctor may order a blood test called a
complete blood count (CBC) to look for anemia (which could be caused by the cancer
bleeding into the stomach). A fecal occult blood test may be done to look for blood in
stool (feces) that isnt visible to the naked eye.
The doctor might recommend other tests if cancer is found, especially if you are going to
have surgery. For instance, blood tests will be done to make sure your liver and kidney
functions are normal and that your blood clots normally. If surgery is planned or you are
going to get medicines that can affect the heart, you may also have an electrocardiogram
(EKG) and echocardiogram (an ultrasound of the heart) to make sure your heart is
functioning well.
This system is for staging all stomach cancers except those starting in either the
gastroesophageal junction (where the stomach and the esophagus meet) or in the cardia
(the first part of the stomach) and growing into the gastroesophageal junction. Those
cancers are staged (and often treated) like cancers of the esophagus. (See our document
Esophagus Cancer)
The innermost layer is the mucosa. The mucosa has 3 parts: epithelial cells, which lie
on top of a layer of connective tissue (the lamina propria), which is on top of a thin
layer of muscle (the muscularis mucosa).
Under the mucosa is a supporting layer called the submucosa.
Below this is the muscularis propria, a thick layer of muscle that moves and mixes
the stomach contents.
The next 2 layers, the subserosa and the outermost serosa, act as wrapping layers for
the stomach.
TX: The main (primary) tumor cannot be assessed.
T0: No signs of a main tumor can be found.
Tis: Cancer cells are only in the top layer of cells of the mucosa (innermost layer of the
stomach) and have not grown into deeper layers of tissue such as the lamina propria or
muscularis mucosa. This stage is also known as carcinoma in situ.
T1: The tumor has grown from the top layer of cells of the mucosa into the next layers
below such as the lamina propria, the muscularis mucosa, or submucosa.
T1a: The tumor is growing into the lamina propria or muscularis mucosa.
T1b: The tumor has grown through the lamina propria and muscularis mucosa and
into the submucosa.
T2: The tumor is growing into the muscularis propria layer.
T3: The tumor is growing into the subserosa layer.
T4: The tumor has grown into the serosa and may be growing into a nearby organ
(spleen, intestines, pancreas, kidney, etc.) or other structures such as major blood vessels.
T4a: The tumor has grown through the stomach wall into the serosa, but the cancer
hasnt grown into any of the nearby organs or structures.
T4b: The tumor has grown through the stomach wall and into nearby organs or
structures.
T3, N0, M0: The cancer has grown through the main muscle layer into the subserosa, but
has not grown through all the layers to the outside the stomach (T3). It has not spread to
any nearby lymph nodes (N0) or to distant tissues or organs (M0).
Unresectable cancers cant be removed completely. This might be because the tumor
has grown too far into nearby organs or lymph nodes, it has grown too close to major
blood vessels, it has spread to distant parts of the body, or the person is not healthy
enough for surgery.
There is no distinct dividing line between resectable and unresectable in terms of the
TNM stage of the cancer, but earlier stage cancers are more likely to be resectable.
Stage
5 year
observed
survival
Stage IA
71%
Stage IB
57%
Stage IIA
46%
Stage IIB
33%
Stage IIIA
20%
Stage IIIB
14%
Stage IIIC
9%
Stage IV
4%
The overall 5-year relative survival rate of all people with stomach cancer in the United
States is about 29%. The 5-year relative survival rate compares the observed survival of
people with stomach cancer to that expected for people without stomach cancer. Since
some people may die from other causes, this is a better way to see the impact of cancer
on survival.
This survival rate has improved gradually over the last 30 years. One reason the overall
survival rate is poor in the United States is that most stomach cancers are diagnosed at an
advanced rather than an early stage. The stage of the cancer has a major effect on a
patients prognosis (outlook for survival).
Endoscopic resection
Endoscopic mucosal resection and endoscopic submucosal resection can be used only to
treat some very early-stage cancers, where the chance of spread to the lymph nodes is
very low.
These procedures do not require a cut (incision) in the skin. Instead, the surgeon passes
an endoscope (a long, flexible tube with a small video camera on the end) down the
throat and into the stomach. Surgical tools can be passed through the endoscope to
remove the tumor and part of the normal stomach wall around it.
These are not done as much in the United States as they are in countries (like Japan)
where stomach cancer is more common and more often found at an early stage due to
screening. If you are going to have this kind of surgery, it should be at a center that has
experience with this technique.
Eating is much easier after surgery if only part of the stomach is removed instead of the
entire stomach.
Total gastrectomy
This operation is done if the cancer has spread throughout the stomach. It is also often
advised if the cancer is in the upper part of the stomach, near the esophagus.
The surgeon removes the entire stomach, nearby lymph nodes, and omentum, and may
remove the spleen and parts of the esophagus, intestines, pancreas, or other nearby
organs. The end of the esophagus is then attached to part of the small intestine. This
allows food to move down the intestinal tract. But people who have had their stomach
removed can only eat a small amount of food at a time. Because of this, they must eat
more often.
Most subtotal and total gastrectomies are done through a large incision (cut) in the skin of
the abdomen. In some centers, they can be done using laparoscopy, which allows the
stomach to be removed through several smaller cuts in the abdomen. Although this
approach shows promise, many doctors feel that this needs to be studied further before it
can be considered a standard treatment for stomach cancer.
In any event, it takes a skilled surgeon who is experienced in stomach cancer surgery to
remove all the lymph nodes successfully. Ask your surgeon about his or her experience in
operating on stomach cancer. Studies have shown that the results are better when both the
surgeon and the hospital have had extensive experience in treating patients with stomach
cancer.
Surgical techniques have improved in recent years, so only about 1% to 2% of people die
from surgery for stomach cancer. This number is higher when the operation is more
extensive, such as when all the lymph nodes are removed, but it is lower in the hands of
highly skilled surgeons.
You will not be allowed to eat or drink anything for at least a few days after a total or
subtotal gastrectomy. This is to give the digestive tract time to heal and to make sure
there are no leaks in parts that have been sewn together during the operation.
You may develop side effects after you recover from surgery. These can include nausea,
heartburn, abdominal pain, and diarrhea, particularly after eating. These side effects
result from the fact that once part or all of the stomach is removed, food enters the
intestines too quickly after eating. The side effects often get better over time, but in some
people they can last for a long time. Your doctor might prescribe medicines to help with
this.
Changes in your diet will be needed after a partial or total gastrectomy. The biggest
change is that you will need to eat smaller, more frequent meals. The amount of stomach
removed will affect how much you need to change the way you eat.
The stomach helps the body absorb some vitamins, so people who have had a subtotal or
total gastrectomy may develop vitamin deficiencies. If certain parts of the stomach are
removed, doctors routinely prescribe vitamin supplements, some of which can only be
injected.
Before your surgery, ask your surgeon how much of the stomach he or she intends to
remove. Some surgeons try to leave behind as much of the stomach as they can to allow
patients to eat more normally afterward. The tradeoff is that the cancer might be more
likely to come back. The extent of the surgery should be discussed with your doctor
before it is done.
It cannot be stressed enough that you should make sure your surgeon is experienced in
treating stomach cancer and able to perform the most up-to-date operations to reduce
your risk of complications. To learn more about surgery for cancer, see our document A
Guide to Cancer Surgery .
Chemo may be given after surgery to remove the cancer. This is called adjuvant
treatment. The goal of adjuvant chemo is to kill any cancer cells that may have been
left behind but are too small to see. This can help keep the cancer from coming back.
Often, for stomach cancer, chemo is given with radiation therapy after surgery. This
combination is called chemoradiation. This may be especially helpful for cancers that
could not be removed completely by surgery.
Chemo may be given as the primary (main) treatment for stomach cancer that has
spread (metastasized) to distant organs. It may help shrink the cancer or slow its
growth, which can relieve symptoms for some patients and help them live longer.
Doctors give chemo in cycles, with each period of treatment followed by a rest period to
allow the body time to recover. Each cycle typically lasts for a few weeks.
A number of chemo drugs can be used to treat stomach cancer, including:
5-FU (fluorouracil), often given along with leucovorin (folinic acid)
Capecitabine (Xeloda)
Carboplatin
Cisplatin
Docetaxel (Taxotere)
Epirubicin (Ellence)
Irinotecan (Camptosar)
Oxaliplatin (Eloxatin)
Paclitaxel (Taxol)
Depending on the situation (including the stage of the cancer, the persons overall health,
and whether chemo is combined with radiation therapy), these drugs may be used alone
or combined with other chemotherapy or targeted drugs.
Some common drug combinations used when surgery is planned include:
ECF (epirubicin, cisplatin, and 5-FU),which may be given before and after surgery
Docetaxel or paclitaxel plus either 5-FU or capecitabine, combined with radiation as
treatment before surgery
Cisplatin plus either 5-FU or capecitabine, combined with radiation as treatment
before surgery
Paclitaxel and carboplatin, combined with radiation as treatment before surgery
When chemo is given with radiation after surgery, a single drug such as 5-FU or
capecitabine may be used.
To treat advanced stomach cancer, ECF may also be used, but other combinations may
also be helpful. Some of these include:
DCF (docetaxel, cisplatin and 5-FU)
Irinotecan plus cisplatin
Irinotecan plus 5-FU or capecitabine
Oxaliplatin plus 5-FU or capecitabine
Many doctors prefer to use combinations of 2 chemo drugs to treat advanced stomach
cancer. Three-drug combinations can have more side effects, so they are usually reserved
for people who are in very good health and who can be followed closely by their doctor.
feet) such as pain, burning or tingling sensations, sensitivity to cold or heat, or weakness.
In most cases this goes away once treatment is stopped, but it may be long-lasting in
some patients. Oxaliplatin can also affect nerves in the throat, causing throat pain that is
worse when trying to eat or drink cold liquids or foods. This pain can lead to trouble
swallowing or even breathing, and can last a few days after treatment.
Heart damage: Doxorubicin, epirubicin, and some other drugs may cause permanent
heart damage if used for a long time or in high doses. For this reason, doctors carefully
control the doses and use heart tests such as echocardiograms or MUGA scans to monitor
heart function. Treatment with these drugs is stopped at the first sign of heart damage.
Hand-foot syndrome can occur during treatment with capecitabine or 5-FU (when given
as an infusion). This starts out as redness in the hands and feet, which can then progress
to pain and sensitivity in the palms and soles. If it worsens, blistering or skin peeling can
occur, sometimes leading to open, painful sores. There is no specific treatment, although
some creams may help. These symptoms gradually get better when the drug is stopped or
the dose is decreased. The best way to prevent severe hand-foot syndrome is to tell your
doctor when early symptoms come up, so that the drug dose can be changed.
To learn more about chemotherapy, see the Chemotherapy section of our website, or
our document A Guide to Chemotherapy.
Trastuzumab
About 1 out of 5 of stomach cancers has too much of a growth-promoting protein called
HER2/neu (or just HER2) on the surface of the cancer cells. Tumors with increased
levels of HER2 are called HER2-positive.
Trastuzumab (Herceptin) is a monoclonal antibody, a man-made version of a very
specific immune system protein, which targets the HER2 protein. Giving trastuzumab
with chemo can help some patients with advanced, HER2-positive stomach cancer live
longer than giving chemo alone.
This drug only works if the cancer cells have too much HER2, so samples of your tumor
must be tested to look for HER2 before starting treatment (see How is stomach cancer
diagnosed?). It is not used in people whose cancer is HER2-negative.
Trastuzumab is injected into a vein (IV). For stomach cancer it is given once every 2 or 3
weeks along with chemo. The best length of time to give it is not yet known.
The side effects of trastuzumab tend to be relatively mild. They can include fever and
chills, weakness, nausea, vomiting, cough, diarrhea, and headache. These side effects
occur less often after the first dose. This drug can also rarely lead to heart damage. The
risk of heart damage is increased if trastuzumab is given with certain chemo drugs called
anthracyclines, such as epirubicin (Ellence) or doxorubicin (Adriamycin).
Ramucirumab
In order for cancers to grow and spread, they need to create new blood vessels so that the
tumors get blood and nutrients. One of the proteins that tells the body to make new blood
vessels is called VEGF. VEGF binds to cell surface proteins called receptors to act.
Ramucirumab (Cyramza) is a monoclonal antibody that binds to a receptor for VEGF.
This keeps VEGF from binding to the receptor and signaling the body to make more
blood vessels. This can help slow or stop the growth and spread of cancer.
Ramucirumab is used to treat advanced stomach cancer, most often after another drug
stops working.
This drug is given as infusion into a vein (IV) every 2 weeks.
The most common side effects of this drug are high blood pressure, headache, and
diarrhea. Rare but possibly serious side effects include blood clots, severe bleeding, holes
forming in the stomach or intestines (called perforations), and problems with wound
healing. If a hole forms in the stomach or intestine it can lead to severe infection and may
require surgery to correct.
Radiation therapy can be used to slow the growth and ease the symptoms of advanced
stomach cancer, such as pain, bleeding, and eating problems.
External beam radiation therapy is the type of radiation therapy often used to treat
stomach cancer. This treatment focuses radiation on the cancer from a machine outside
the body. Often, special types of external beam radiation, such three-dimensional
conformal radiation therapy (3D-CRT) and intensity modulated radiation therapy
(IMRT) are used. These use computers and special techniques to focus the radiation on
the cancer and limit the damage to nearby normal tissues.
Before your treatments start, the radiation team will take careful measurements to
determine the correct angles for aiming the radiation beams and the proper dose of
radiation. Radiation therapy is much like getting an x-ray, but the radiation is much
stronger. The procedure itself is painless. Each treatment lasts only a few minutes,
although the setup time getting you into place for treatment usually takes longer.
Treatments are usually given 5 days a week over several weeks or months. Side effects
from radiation therapy for stomach cancer can include:
Skin problems, ranging from redness to blistering and peeling, in the area where the
radiation passed through
Nausea and vomiting
Diarrhea
Fatigue
Low blood cell counts
These usually go away within several weeks after the treatment is finished.
When radiation is given with chemotherapy, side effects are often worse. Patients may
have problems eating and getting enough fluids. Some need to have fluids given into a
vein (IV) or have a feeding tube placed to get nutrition during treatment.
Please be sure to tell your doctor about any side effects you have, because there are often
ways to relieve them.
Radiation might also damage nearby organs that are exposed to the beams. This could
lead to problems such as heart or lung damage, or even an increased risk of another
cancer later on. Doctors do everything they can to prevent this by using only the needed
dose of radiation, carefully controlling where the beams are aimed, and shielding certain
parts of the body from the radiation during treatment.
It is very important that you get treated at a center that has extensive experience in
treating stomach cancer.
More information on radiation therapy can be found in the Radiation section of our
website, or in our document Understanding Radiation Therapy: A Guide for Patients and
Families.
relieve pain, or peppermint tea to relieve nausea. Some complementary methods are
known to help, while others have not been tested. Some have been proven not be helpful,
and a few have even been found harmful.
Alternative treatments: Alternative treatments may be offered as cancer cures. These
treatments have not been proven safe and effective in clinical trials. Some of these
methods may pose danger, or have life-threatening side effects. But the biggest danger in
most cases is that you may lose the chance to be helped by standard medical treatment.
Delays or interruptions in your medical treatments may give the cancer more time to
grow and make it less likely that treatment will help.
Stage 0
Because stage 0 cancers are limited to the inner lining layer of the stomach and have not
grown into deeper layers, they can be treated by surgery alone. No chemotherapy or
radiation therapy is needed.
Surgery with either subtotal gastrectomy (removal of part of the stomach) or total
gastrectomy (removal of the entire stomach) is often the main treatment for these cancers.
Nearby lymph nodes are removed as well.
Some small stage 0 cancers can be treated by endoscopic resection. In this procedure the
cancer is removed through an endoscope passed down the throat. This is done more often
in Japan, where stomach cancer is often detected early during screening. It is rare to find
stomach cancer so early in the United States, so this treatment has not been used as much
here. If it is done, it should be at a cancer center that has a great deal of experience with
this technique.
Stage I
Stage IA: People with stage IA stomach cancer typically have their cancer removed by
total or subtotal gastrectomy. The nearby lymph nodes are also removed. Endoscopic
resection may rarely be an option for some small T1a cancers. No further treatment is
usually needed after surgery.
Stage IB: The main treatment for this stage of stomach cancer is surgery (total or
subtotal gastrectomy). Chemotherapy (chemo) or chemoradiation (chemo plus radiation
therapy) may be given before surgery to try to shrink the cancer and make it easier to
remove.
After surgery, patients whose lymph nodes (removed at surgery) show no signs of cancer
spread are sometimes observed without further treatment, but often doctors will
recommend treatment with either chemoradiation or chemo alone after surgery
(especially if the patient didnt get one of these before surgery). Patients who were
treated with chemo before surgery may get the same chemo (without radiation) after
surgery.
If cancer is found in the lymph nodes, treatment with either chemoradiation, chemo
alone, or a combination of the two is often recommended.
If a person is too sick (from other illnesses) to have surgery, they may be treated with
chemoradiation if they can tolerate it. Other options include radiation therapy or chemo
alone.
Stage II
The main treatment for stage II stomach cancer is surgery to remove all or part of the
stomach, the omentum, and nearby lymph nodes. Many patients are treated with chemo
or chemoradiation before surgery to try to shrink the cancer and make it easier to remove.
Treatment after surgery may include chemo alone or chemoradiation.
If a person is too sick (from other illnesses) to have surgery, they may be treated with
chemoradiation if they can tolerate it. Other options include radiation therapy or chemo
alone.
Stage III
Surgery is the main treatment for patients with this stage disease (unless they have other
medical conditions that make them too ill for it). Some patients may be cured by surgery
(along with other treatments), while for others the surgery may be able to help control the
cancer or help relieve symptoms.
Some people may get chemo or chemoradiation before surgery to try to shrink the cancer
and make it easier to remove. Patients who get chemo before surgery will probably get
chemo after, as well. For patients who dont get chemo before surgery and for those who
have surgery but have some cancer left behind, treatment after surgery is usually
chemoradiation.
If a person is too sick (from other illnesses) to have surgery, they may be treated with
chemoradiation if they can tolerate it. Other options include radiation therapy or chemo
alone.
Stage IV
Because stage IV stomach cancer has spread to distant organs, a cure is usually not
possible. But treatment can often help keep the cancer under control and help relieve
symptoms. This might include surgery, such as a gastric bypass or even a subtotal
gastrectomy in some cases, to keep the stomach and/or intestines from becoming blocked
(obstructed) or to control bleeding.
In some cases, a laser beam directed through an endoscope (a long, flexible tube passed
down the throat) can destroy most of the tumor and relieve obstruction without surgery. If
needed, a stent (a hollow metal tube) may be placed where the esophagus and stomach
meet to help keep it open and allow food to pass through it. This can also be done at the
junction of the stomach and the small intestine.
Chemo and/or radiation therapy can often help shrink the cancer and relieve some
symptoms as well as help patients live longer, but is usually not expected to cure the
cancer. Combinations of chemo drugs are most commonly used, but which combination
is best is not clear.
Targeted therapy can also be helpful in treating advanced cancers. Trastuzumab
(Herceptin) can be added to chemotherapy for patients whose tumors are HER2-positive.
Ramucirumab (Cyramza) may also be an option at some point. It can be given by itself or
added to chemo.
Because these cancers can be hard to treat, new treatments being tested in clinical trials
may benefit some patients.
Even if treatments do not destroy or shrink the cancer, there are ways to relieve pain and
symptoms from the disease. Patients should tell their cancer care team about any
symptoms or pain they have right way, so they can be managed effectively.
Nutrition is another concern for many patients with stomach cancer. Help is available
ranging from nutritional counseling to placement of a tube into the small intestine to help
provide nutrition for those who have trouble eating, if needed.
Recurrent cancer
Cancer that comes back after initial treatment is known as recurrent cancer. Treatment
options for recurrent disease are generally the same as they are for stage IV cancers. But
they also depend on where the cancer recurs, what treatments a person has already had,
and the persons general health.
Clinical trials or newer treatments may be an option and should always be considered.
What is the stage of my cancer, and what does that mean in my case?
Are there other tests that need to be done before we can decide on treatment?
Will I need to see other doctors?
How much experience do you have treating this type of cancer?
What treatment choices do I have?
What do you recommend and why?
What is the goal of treatment (to cure the cancer, slow its growth, ease symptoms,
etc.)?
Are there any clinical trials I should think about now?
How quickly do we need to decide on treatment?
What should I do to be ready for treatment?
How long will treatment last? What will it involve? Where will it be done?
What risks or side effects are there to the treatments you suggest? How long are they
likely to last?
How will treatment affect my daily life? Will it affect the way I eat?
Based on what youve learned about my cancer, what is my prognosis (outlook)?
What type of follow-up will I need after treatment?
What would my options be if the treatment doesnt work or if the cancer recurs?
Where can I find more information and support?
Along with these sample questions, be sure to write down some of your own. For
instance, you might want more information about recovery times, or you might want to
ask about getting a second opinion.
It may take a while before your fears lessen. But it may help to know that many cancer
survivors have learned to live with this uncertainty and are leading full lives. Our
document Living with Uncertainty: The Fear of Cancer Recurrence gives more detailed
information on this.
In other people, the cancer may never go away completely. These people may get regular
treatments with chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or other therapies to try to help keep the
cancer in check. Learning to live with cancer that does not go away can be difficult and
very stressful. It has its own type of uncertainty. Our document When Cancer Doesnt Go
Away talks more about this.
Follow-up care
If you have completed treatment, your doctors will still want to watch you closely. It is
very important to go to all of your follow-up appointments. During these visits, your
doctors will ask questions about any problems you are having and may do exams and lab
or imaging tests to look for signs of cancer or treatment side effects. Almost any cancer
treatment can have side effects. Some last for a few weeks to months, but others can last
the rest of your life. This is the time for you to talk to your cancer care team about any
changes or problems you notice and any questions or concerns you have.
Most doctors recommend careful follow-up, with a physical exam and review of
symptoms every 3 to 6 months for the first few years, then at least yearly after that. Lab
tests might also be done. Scans are not usually needed at each visit, but should be done if
there are any suspicious symptoms or physical findings.
If you have had surgery, your health care team may suggest that you meet with a
nutritionist, who can help you adjust to changes in your eating habits.
People who have had surgery especially if they had the upper part of their stomach
removed (in either a subtotal or total gastrectomy) will probably need to have their
vitamin blood levels tested regularly and may need to get vitamin supplements, which
may include B12 injections. (The pill form of vitamin B12 isnt absorbed if the upper part
of the stomach has been removed.)
It is important to keep your health insurance during this time. Tests and doctor visits can
cost a lot, and even though no one wants to think of their cancer coming back, this could
happen.
Should your cancer come back, our document When Your Cancer Comes Back: Cancer
Recurrence can give you information on how to manage and cope with this phase of your
treatment.
Gathering these details soon after treatment may be easier than trying to get them at some
point in the future. Make sure you have the following information handy:
A copy of your pathology report(s) from any biopsies or surgeries
If you had surgery, a copy of your operative report(s)
If you stayed in the hospital, a copy of the discharge summary that doctors prepare
when patients are sent home
If you had radiation therapy, a copy of the treatment summary
If you had chemotherapy or targeted therapies, a list of the drugs, drug doses, and
when you took them
Copies of your x-rays and imaging tests (these can often be placed on a DVD)
Eating better
Eating right can be hard for anyone, but it can get even tougher during and after cancer
treatment. This is especially true for cancers that affect the digestive tract, such as
stomach cancer. The cancer or its treatment can affect how you eat and absorb nutrition.
Nausea can be a problem from some treatments. You may lose your appetite for a while
and lose weight when you dont want to.
During treatment: If you are losing weight or have trouble eating during treatment, do
the best you can. Eat what appeals to you. Eat what you can, when you can. You might
find it helps to eat small portions every 2 to 3 hours until you feel better. Now is not the
time to restrict your diet. Try to keep in mind that these problems usually improve over
time. Your cancer team may refer you to a dietitian, an expert in nutrition who can give
you ideas on how to fight some of the side effects of your treatment.
After treatment: If part or all of your stomach has been removed, you might need to eat
smaller amounts of food more often. Your doctor or nutritionist may also recommend that
you stay upright for some time after eating. Your health care team can help you adjust
your diet if you are having problems eating.
Some patients have problems with nausea, diarrhea, sweating, and flushing after eating.
This is called dumping syndrome. When part or all of the stomach is removed, the food
that is swallowed quickly passes into the intestine, leading to these symptoms after
eating. These symptoms often get better over time.
Some people may need nutritional supplements to help make sure they get the nutrition
they need. Some people may even need a feeding tube, usually called a jejunostomy tube
(or J-tube), put into the small intestine. This is done through a small hole in the skin over
the abdomen during a minor operation. A J-tube allows liquid nutrition to be put directly
into the small intestine to help prevent weight loss and improve nutrition. Less often, the
tube may be placed into the lower part of the stomach instead. This is known as a
gastrostomy tube or G-tube.
One of the best things you can do after cancer treatment is put healthy eating habits into
place. You may be surprised at the long-term benefits of some simple changes, like
increasing the variety of healthy foods you eat. Getting to and staying at a healthy weight,
eating a healthy diet, and limiting your alcohol intake may lower your risk for a number
of types of cancer, as well as having many other health benefits.
yourself too hard. Listen to your body and rest when you need to. (For more information
on dealing with fatigue, please see Fatigue in People With Cancer and Anemia in People
With Cancer.)
Keep in mind exercise can improve your physical and emotional health.
It improves your cardiovascular (heart and circulation) fitness.
Along with a good diet, it will help you get to and stay at a healthy weight.
It makes your muscles stronger.
It reduces fatigue and helps you have more energy.
It can help lower anxiety and depression.
It can make you feel happier.
It helps you feel better about yourself.
And long term, we know that getting regular physical activity plays a role in helping to
lower the risk of some cancers, as well as having other health benefits.
to try this. But it is important to think about and understand your reasons for choosing
this plan.
No matter what you decide to do, you need to feel as good as you can. Make sure you are
asking for and getting treatment for any symptoms you might have, such as nausea or
pain. This type of treatment is called palliative care.
Palliative care helps relieve symptoms, but is not expected to cure the disease. It can be
given along with cancer treatment, or can even be cancer treatment. The difference is its
purpose the main goal of palliative care is to improve the quality of your life, or help
you feel as good as you can for as long as you can. Sometimes this means using
medicines to help with symptoms like pain or nausea. Sometimes, though, the treatments
used to control your symptoms are the same as those used to treat cancer. For instance,
radiation might be used to help relieve pain caused by cancer that has spread. Or chemo
might be used to help shrink a tumor and keep it from blocking the bowels. But this is not
the same as treatment to try to cure the cancer. You can learn more about the physical and
emotional changes, as well as plans and preparations for yourself and your family, in our
document Nearing the End of Life.
At some point, you may benefit from hospice care. This is special care that treats the
person rather than the disease; it focuses on quality rather than length of life. Most of the
time, it is given at home. Your cancer may be causing problems that need to be managed,
and hospice focuses on your comfort. You should know that while getting hospice care
often means the end of treatments such as chemo and radiation, it doesnt mean you cant
have treatment for the problems caused by your cancer or other health conditions. In
hospice, the focus of your care is on living life as fully as possible and feeling as well as
you can at this difficult time. You can learn more about hospice in our document Hospice
Care.
Staying hopeful is important, too. Your hope for a cure may not be as bright, but there is
still hope for good times with family and friends times that are filled with happiness
and meaning. Pausing at this time in your cancer treatment gives you a chance to refocus
on the most important things in your life. Now is the time to do some things youve
always wanted to do and to stop doing the things you no longer want to do. Though the
cancer may be beyond your control, there are still choices you can make.
Risk factors
Diet
Research has clearly shown that differences in diet are an important factor in explaining
variations in stomach cancer risk around the world. Recent research in countries with
relatively low stomach cancer risk has provided some insight into risk factors. Diets high
in preserved meats and low in fresh fruits and vegetables have been linked with higher
risk.
Chemoprevention
Chemoprevention is the use of natural or man-made chemicals to lower the risk of
developing cancer. Some types of chemicals might be useful in helping prevent stomach
cancer.
Antioxidants
Many carcinogenic (cancer-causing) factors cause cells to form a type of chemical called
a free radical. Free radicals can damage important parts of cells such as genes.
Depending on how severe the damage is, the cells may die or they may become
cancerous.
Antioxidants are a group of nutrients and other chemicals that can destroy free radicals or
prevent them from forming. These nutrients include vitamin C, beta-carotene, vitamin E,
and the mineral selenium. Studies that have looked at using dietary supplements to lower
stomach cancer risk have had mixed results so far. There is some evidence that
combinations of antioxidant supplements may reduce the risk of stomach cancer in
people with poor nutrition to begin with. Further research in this area is needed.
Antibiotics
Studies are being done to see whether antibiotic treatment of people who are chronically
infected by H pylori will help prevent stomach cancer. Some studies have found that
treating this infection may prevent pre-cancerous stomach abnormalities, but more
research is needed.
Although not truly chemoprevention, antibiotics may help prevent stomach cancer from
recurring in some cases. Researchers have shown that antibiotics may lower the risk that
the cancer will come back in another part of the stomach in people who have been treated
with endoscopic mucosal resection for early stage stomach cancer. Unfortunately, in the
United States stomach cancers are more often found at a later stage, so its not clear how
useful these results might be here.
Staging
Sentinel lymph node mapping
Doctors are trying to identify the spread of stomach cancer to lymph nodes using this
technique, which has proved very successful in melanoma and breast cancer.
In sentinel lymph node mapping, the surgeon injects a blue dye and/or a radioactive
tracer substance into the cancer. These concentrate in the lymph nodes that would be the
first site of cancer spread. Doctors can remove these lymph nodes and look for cancer. If
no cancer is found in these lymph nodes, then the cancer is unlikely to have reached
others, and a full lymph node removal might not be needed. If cancer is found in the
sentinel lymph node(s), then all the lymph nodes would still need to be removed.
This technique has been shown to help find more lymph nodes to remove, and to find
lymph nodes that are more likely to contain cancer cells. But this technique is still being
studied in stomach cancer and is not yet ready for widespread use.
Treatment
Chemotherapy drugs and combinations
Some studies are testing new ways to combine drugs already known to be active against
stomach cancer or other cancers. Newer chemotherapy (chemo) drugs are also being
studied. For example, S-1 is an oral chemo drug related to 5-FU. This drug is commonly
used for stomach cancer in some other parts of the world, but it is not yet available in the
United States.
Other studies are testing the best ways to combine chemo with radiation therapy, targeted
therapies, or immunotherapy. A good deal of effort is being directed at improving the
results of surgery by adding chemo and/or radiation therapy either before or after surgery.
Several clinical trials of this approach are in progress.
New ways of giving chemo are also being studied. For example, some doctors are
looking at infusing chemo directly into the abdomen (intraperitoneal chemotherapy) to
see if it might work better with fewer side effects.
Targeted therapies
Chemo drugs target cells that divide rapidly, which is why they work against cancer cells.
But there are other aspects of cancer cells that make them different from normal cells. In
recent years, researchers have developed new targeted drugs to try to exploit these
differences. Targeted drugs sometimes work when standard chemo drugs dont. They
also tend to have less severe side effects than chemo drugs.
Drugs that block HER2: Some stomach cancers have too much of the HER2 protein on
the surface of their cells, which helps them grow. Drugs that target this protein might
help treat these cancers. Trastuzumab (Herceptin) is already approved for use against
advanced stomach cancer. Other drugs that target HER2, such as lapatinib (Tykerb),
pertuzumab (Perjeta), and trastuzumab emtansine (Kadcyla) are now being studied in
clinical trials.
Drugs that block EGFR: EGFR is another protein found on some stomach cancer cells
that helps them grow. Panitumumab (Vectibix) is a drug that targets EGFR that is being
tested against stomach cancer. This drug is already FDA-approved to treat some other
cancers.
Other targeted drugs: Other drugs target different parts of cancer cells. Other targeted
drugs that are being studied against stomach cancer include sorafenib (Nexavar) and
apatinib, among others.
Most of the research in this area is looking at combining targeted agents with
chemotherapy or with each other.
Immunotherapy
Immunotherapy is an approach that uses drugs to try and help the bodys immune system
fight the cancer.
A Korean study showed that combining chemotherapy with an immunotherapy called
polyadenylic-polyuridylic acid (poly A:U) slowed stomach cancer from returning when
given as adjuvant therapy after surgery. It also helped some patients live longer.
You can learn more about immunotherapy in our document Immunotherapy.
To find a clinical trial in your area, contact the American Cancer Society at 1-800-2272345 or go to www.cancer.org/clinicaltrials.
Books
Your American Cancer Society also has books that you might find helpful. Call us at 1800-227-2345 or visit our bookstore online to find out about costs or to place an order.
No matter who you are, we can help. Contact us anytime, day or night, for information
and support. Call us at 1-800-227-2345 or visit www.cancer.org.
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Last Medical Review: 5/20/2014
Last Revised: 3/16/2015
2014 Copyright American Cancer Society