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Health & Fitness > Cancer > Update on My Brother's Cancer..
 

Update on My Brother's Cancer..

The news here is about the same....nothing very new to report.  My brother has had his cat scan, which confirmed a tumor about one inch across and two inches in depth.  He was told it was consistent with lung cancer.  
Last Friday, he had a needle biopsy to remove a small bit of the tumor to determine what type of cancer it is.

Lung cancers, also known as bronchogenic carcinomas, are broadly classified into two types: small cell lung cancers (SCLC) and non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC). This classification is based upon the microscopic appearance of the tumor cells themselves. These two types of cancers grow and spread in different ways and may have different treatment options, so a distinction between these two types is important.

SCLC comprise about 20% of lung cancers and are the most aggressive and rapidly growing of all lung cancers. SCLC are strongly related to cigarette smoking, with only 1% of these tumors occurring in nonsmokers. SCLC metastasize rapidly to many sites within the body and are most often discovered after they have spread extensively. Referring to a specific cell appearance often seen when examining samples of SCLC under the microscope, these cancers are sometimes called oat cell carcinomas.

NSCLC are the most common lung cancers, accounting for about 80% of all lung cancers. NSCLC can be divided into three main types that are named based upon the type of cells found in the tumor:



  • Adenocarcinomas are the most commonly seen type of NSCLC in the U.S. and comprise up to 50% of NSCLC. While adenocarcinomas are associated with smoking, like other lung cancers, this type is observed as well in nonsmokers who develop lung cancer. Most adenocarcinomas arise in the outer, or peripheral, areas of the lungs. Bronchioloalveolar carcinoma is a subtype of adenocarcinoma that frequently develops at multiple sites in the lungs and spreads along the preexisting alveolar walls.




  • Squamous cell carcinomas were formerly more common than adenocarcinomas; at present, they account for about 30% of NSCLC. Also known as epidermoid carcinomas, squamous cell cancers arise most frequently in the central chest area in the bronchi.




  • Large cell carcinomas, sometimes referred to as undifferentiated carcinomas, are the least common type of NSCLC.



It will be a couple of weeks before we know exactly the type of lung cancer he has.  In the meantime, he will undergo a PET scan to determine if any other places in his body indicate the possibility of cancer.

It is just a wait and see where we are.  The PET scan and the biopsy will determine what happens next.
 




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posted on Mar 15, 2010 12:59 PM ()

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