TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH: Rectal cancer treatment works well
DEAR DR. ROACH: My daughter, who’s 44 years old, was recently diagnosed with rectal cancer. It’s stage III and contained. She has no cancer in her liver, lymph nodes, rectum or colon. Her doctor is going to start her on a more aggressive chemo than he first thought of, then radiation. Since the cancer’s contained, once it’s removed, would her survival rate be better than someone whose cancer had spread to other organs? Would there be recurrences?
• N.F.B.
ANSWER: I’m sorry to hear of your daughter being diagnosed with colorectal cancer at such a young age. Normally, screening begins at age 45, so she was diagnosed before screening usually begins. More young people are being diagnosed recently. The reason isn’t exactly clear, but a less-healthy diet, a lack of exercise, and increasing rates of obesity may be increasing the risk.
The stage is a big determining factor in the survival rates for colon cancer, and stage III is much better than stage IV (when cancer has spread to other organs). Your daughter’s undergoing the standard of care, which is chemotherapy and radiation prior to surgery. The goal is to shrink the cancer so that it can all be removed during surgery.
After the cancer is removed, her doctor will perform a restaging based on the pathology of the tumor, the molecular characteristics of the cancer, the presence or absence of lymph nodes, and how much of a response the cancer had to the presurgical treatment. With this information, your daughter will have a much better idea of whether she can be considered “cured.”
The best treatment now can cure most people who are in stage III.
DEAR DR. ROACH: Why aren’t more doctors advising a WATCHMAN instead of anticoagulation like Eliquis for seniors with atrial fibrillation (AFib)?
• B.J.
ANSWER: The best data right now shows that a left atrial appendage closure device, like the WATCHMAN, isn’t worse than anticoagulation with apixaban (Eliquis) in older people who have AFib.
Although there were slightly fewer deaths in the anticoagulation group (4.8% versus 5.7% among those who received the WATCHMAN FLX device), this difference wasn’t considered statistically significant, meaning that it could’ve happened by chance if the therapies were equivalent. However, the decreased bleeding among the WATCHMAN group (19% versus 11%) was statistically significant.
ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu.


