Home Cancer Mayo Clinic Minute: Are Colon And Rectal Cancers Treated Differently? — Scheduled

Mayo Clinic Minute: Are Colon And Rectal Cancers Treated Differently? — Scheduled

Dr. Eric Dozois and team during a surgical procedure

Colorectal cancer is a term that combines both colon cancer and rectal cancers. The colon and rectum are two different parts of the lower digestive tract. These different cancers also mean different approaches to treatment that may involve the use of radiation and chemotherapy in addition to surgery.

When it comes to treating cancer, experience matters, says Dr. Eric Dozois, a Mayo Clinic colon and rectal surgeon. And Mayo Clinic has been transforming this type of care for more than 100 years.

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Colon and rectal cancers may be detected during the same screening, but they are treated differently, says Dr. Eric Dozois.

“Our approach to rectal cancer, for example, often involves more aggressive treatments that help prevent it from coming back,” says Dr. Dozois.

Innovation plays a strong role in rectal cancer surgery at Mayo Clinic’s Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Robotic surgery allows your surgeon to work more efficiently in small spaces, providing an enhanced view of the area where the operation is taking place. Some of the benefits include:

  • Surgery is performed while the surgeon sits at a console and uses controls to guide high-tech surgical tools.
  • Allows surgeons to work in small spaces with three-dimensional visualization, and with more precision, flexibility and control than with conventional techniques.
  • Minimally invasive, fewer complications, quicker recovery, fewer urological complications and may reduce nerve dysfunction.

“We’re using laparoscopic and robotic platforms to really offer patients surgery that is most up to date in terms of minimally invasive techniques, the least amount of trauma to the patient, but yet achieving the goals of surgery to remove cancer,” he says.

If colon cancer is caught early, surgery may be the only treatment that is necessary, but Dr. Dozois says, “Even in some of the earlier stages, a more aggressive approach that combines chemotherapy, radiation and surgery is necessary to keep it not only from coming back locally but from spreading to other parts of the body.”

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This article originally appeared here and was republished with permission.