Treatment
Treatment for stage 4 rectal cancer can be complex, and it requires a multidisciplinary team of specialists. Your rectal cancer team will create a treatment plan to care for your cancer based on many factors, including genetic testing, tumor biology, likely response to chemotherapy, radiation therapy, targeted therapies, immunotherapy, surgery, ablation (the removal or destruction of tissue) or embolization (blocking or reducing blood flow to tissue).
Most people with stage 4 rectal cancer will be treated first with chemotherapy. Today, there are several chemotherapy drugs used for rectal cancer. If one type of chemotherapy doesn’t work for you, your team may try another. When the cancer has spread to the liver and lung (metastases), you may require surgery, ablation or different chemotherapy agents.
The order of treatments varies. If you have surgery, you may have chemotherapy both before and after the procedure. Surgical procedures like proctectomy with coloanal anastomosis, anterior resection and abdominoperineal resection can remove cancer in the rectum. If surgery isn’t an option, therapies like ablation could be used to help destroy the tumor.
Another treatment option for stage 4 rectal cancer is immunotherapy. Immunotherapy uses your immune system to target cancer cells with specific features or genetic changes.
Survival rate
At stage 4, rectal cancer is classified as distant colorectal cancer. According to the National Cancer Institute, the five-year survival rate for distant colorectal cancer is 13%.