| What is the rationale of excising
a cancerous growth? |
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The
act of cancer surgery starts from the belief that a cancerous process
begins in a small area in an organ and then gradually becomes larger
and spreads to the surrounding tissues and when the cancer cells
shed by the main mass begin to migrate through the vessels draining
that particular organ, the regional lymph nodes are the first sanctuaries
to arrest and harbor them. |
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It
also believes that most of the time there is a sufficient time lag
between the clinical manifestation of a tumor and its spread beyond
the regional nodes and if the disease bearing part with all round
wide margins and regional nodes can be excised in that window of
opportunity, there is a reasonable chance of curing the disease
(fig 1). Slow growing cancers are thus more suitable for surgical
treatment and that is why initial surgery for malignancy is more
successful than operations for recurrence at a later stage. |
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Cancer
surgery thus aims to remove the disease process along with its surrounding
tissues and the known possible sites of regional spread i.e. the
regional nodes before the disease has spread to the other parts
of the body. An exercise that is indicated by adding the term ‘radical’
before the name of the operation. So removal of a diseased breast
or stomach for cancer is not just mastectomy or gastrectomy, it
is radical mastectomy or radical gastrectomy. See the nodal groups
around the stomach (fig 2). In executing a radical gastrectomy,
all these nodes are required to be removed. |
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But
excision of a tumor is not the only goal of cancer surgery. |
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What
are the other goals of cancer surgery? |
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Cancer
surgery has many other goals other than curing the disease by excision,
though that is ideally the ultimate long term goal. It has many
short term goals as well. Other than doing biopsy and staging procedures,
it can be employed to relieve obstruction, arrest bleeding, correct
a functional defect, and to facilitate employment of other therapies
by debulking a tumor mass. According to the stage and nature of
the disease its intent can be curative, palliative, adjunctive to
other therapies, or simply diagnostic. Reconstruction of the created
defect and rehabilitation is also an integral part of a good oncological
operation. |
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Does
not the surgeon spreads the cancer more by touching the tumor with
his knife? |
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That
is exactly what a cancer surgeon is trained not to do. The operations
are designed in such a way that the main tumor mass in not disturbed
and the surgeon cuts through the normal tissues away from the tumor
mass. At all stages of the operation the surgeon ensures that he
is cutting through the normal tissues away from any disease bearing
part with healthy tumor free margins all around the tumor. This
is later verified by pathological examination of the removed specimen
after operation that the margins of excision are indeed free. |
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| Why then at times a disease
is described as inoperable? |
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Precisely
for the above reason. If the cancer had already spread so much or
is so big that there are not enough healthy margins all around to
cut through without endangering the life of the patient or by creating
some such defects that are not acceptable, then that cancer is described
as ‘inoperable’. Not in the sense that the cancer cannot
be cut out, but because we know that such an operation without healthy
margins all around will result in early recurrence and the intent
of cure will not be successful. There are situations however when
still an operation is needed to be performed for other purposes
like relieving an obstruction or arresting a bleeding or relieving
pain. In very few select situations cytoreductive or debulking surgery
may be performed for large unresectable tumors like ovarian cancers
or gastrointestinal lymphomas. Reduction of the tumor mass increases
the effectiveness of chemotherapy, which is the mainstay, for these
diseases. Resection of locally advanced cancers of oral cavity or
sarcomas also make them more manageable by subsequent radiotherapy
or chemotherapy. |
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| Which cancers are more amenable
to surgical treatment? |
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Most
of the common cancers in early stages are curable by surgery. Skin
cancers, low grade sarcomas, oral cancers, cancer of the larynx,
uterine cervical cancers, early differentiated cancers of thyroid,
salivary gland cancers are at times cured by surgery alone. Early
stage breast cancer, gastrointestinal cancers, kidney cancers are
also cured by surgery but generally they need an adjunctive treatment
with radiotherapy or chemotherapy after surgery. |
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| What happens after surgical
treatment? |
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After
surgery the cancer is restaged. The whole excised specimen undergoes
a thorough histopathological examination and other biochemical tests
to understand the exact type of tumor, its degree of virulence,
adequacy of operation (If margins of excision are free or not) and
to determine future course of action. These tests then can tell
us whether the patients will need radiotherapy or chemotherapy or
hormonal treatment or simply need to be kept under follow-up. |
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| What are the recent advances
in the field of surgical oncology? |
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Advances
in technology has benefited cancer surgery alike all other fields
of science. On the one hand more complex operative procedures have
become possible, on the other lesser procedures can give now better
results. These include: |
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- Improved techniques of surgery and availability
of gadgets to perform complex, radical surgeries, reconstruction,
use of prosthesis, use of endoscopes to perform less invasive
surgeries, laparoscopic surgeries.
- Use of other surgical tools other than knife
to eradicate tumors. Cryosurgery destroys malignant cells by the
application of liquid nitrogen. LASER surgery is used for the
local excisions of tumors and in the treatment of cervical dysplasias
and to minimize bleeding.
- Advanced intensive care units resulting in increased
survival after radical surgical procedures.
- Years of experience and knowledge gathered about
the natural history of cancer makes it now possible to choose
modalities of treatment on a more scientific basis. Like replacement
of earlier procedures of removal of whole breast by less mutilating
surgeries like simple excision of the tumor.
- Surgery may also be useful to manage metastatic
disease. When metastasis is confined to solitary lesions or a
few nodules -- as it may be to the lung, brain or liver -- surgical
removal of these lesions is frequently of value.
- Use of radiolabelled monoclonal antibodies for
better localization of tumors during operations and to facilitate
the excision of the entire tumor using radioimmuno guiding devices.
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| Can Surgery be employed to
prevent cancer? |
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Surgery
plays a significant role in the prevention of malignancy. Surgical
intervention in time might prevent development of cancer from known
existing precancerous lesions. For example, colectomy for a patient
with ulcerative colitis or familial polyposis, excision of oral
dysplastic lesions , cervical dysplasia etc. Prophylactic mastectomies
and ovariotomy can prevent breast and ovarian cancer in women with
strong family history of breast and ovarian cancer, particularly
if they are BRCA gene carriers. Thyroidectomy can prevent familial
medullary cancers of thyroid. |
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| What will be life like after
cancer surgery? |
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Most
patients will get back to their normal life within a span of 4 to
6 weeks, unless incapacitated by further therapies.
Working people usually can go back to their usual profession even
if they had suffered a loss of organ. Even patients who have colostomy
or ileostomy ( When they have to wear bags because their normal
passage of passing stool or urine have been removed) can go back
to their normal life. Incidentally, support groups or associations
exist and work in our city to help such patients. |
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