Staging of Cancer
What is cancer staging?
Staging describes the extent or severity of a cancer at the
time of diagnosis. Knowing the stage of the disease helps
your healthcare provider plan your treatment and can give
an idea of your chances of cure. The way cancer is staged
has changed over time and it keeps changing as scientists
learn more about it.
Staging is based on knowledge of the way cancer develops
and spreads. Cancer cells divide and grow without control
to form a mass of tissue, called a growth or tumor. As the
tumor grows, it can spread to nearby organs and tissues.
Cancer cells can break away from the tumor and get into the
bloodstream or lymph system. The cancer can then spread
site to other parts of the body and form new tumors. The
spread of cancer is called metastasis.
How is cancer classified or staged?
Here are some examples of how cancer may be classified:
- Names related to where the cancer started in the body
- Cancers of body surfaces, cavities, and glands are
called carcinomas.
- Cancers of supportive or connective tissue, such as
muscle or bone, are known as sarcomas.
- Cancers of lymphatic tissue, bone marrow, and blood
cells are called leukemias, lymphomas, and myelomas.
- Cancers of brain tissues are called gliomas.
- Grade is based on how the cancer cells look compared with
normal cells in the same part of the body, but it is not
a part of staging.
The grade of a tumor depends on how abnormal the cancer
cells look under a microscope and how quickly the tumor
is likely to grow and spread. Grading systems are
different for each type of cancer.
- The stage may be based on the size of the primary tumor
and spread of the cancer.
- Stage 0: Early cancer (in situ) is present only in
the layer of cells in which it began.
- Stages I, II, and III: These higher numbers mean the
primary tumor is bigger, the cancer has spread to
nearby lymph nodes, and/or it has spread to organs
next to the primary tumor.
- Stage IV: The cancer has spread (metastasized)
to another part of the body.
- Another staging system is called TNM, which stands for
tumor, nodes, and metastases.
- "T" is defined as the size of the tumor. The size is
measured in centimeters rather than inches. A T1
tumor may be up to 2 to 3 centimeters, depending on
the type of tumor. A T2 tumor may be 2 to 5
centimeters. T3 would be greater than 5 centimeters,
while the largest, T4, would be spreading to nearby
structures of the body.
- "N" is defined as the number of adjacent lymph nodes
containing cancer. Depending on the type of cancer,
it is classified as N1, N2, or N3
- "M" is used to indicate if there are distant
metastases. If there are no distant metastases, a
cancer is staged as M0. If there are metastases, the
cancer is M1.
- An additional letter, "R," may be used. If a cancer
has not been totally removed so that some of it
is still in the body, it is classified as "R," for
"residual." R1 means only a small amount remains
while R2 means the surgeon can see the tumor remains.
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This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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