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Staging
If liver cancer is diagnosed, your doctor needs to
learn the extent (stage) of the disease to help you
choose the best treatment. Staging is an attempt to find
out whether the cancer has spread, and if so, to what
parts of the body.
When liver cancer spreads, the cancer cells may be
found in the lungs. Cancer cells also may be found in
the bones and in lymph nodes near the liver.
When cancer spreads from its original place to
another part of the body, the new tumor has the same
kind of abnormal cells and the same name as the
primary tumor. For example, if liver cancer spreads to
the bones, the cancer cells in the bones are actually
liver cancer cells. The disease is metastatic liver
cancer, not bone cancer. It's treated as liver cancer, not
bone cancer. Doctors sometimes call the new tumor
"distant" or metastatic disease.
To learn whether the liver cancer has spread, your
doctor may order one or more of the following tests:
- CT scan of the chest: A CT scan often can show
whether liver cancer has spread to the lungs.
- Bone scan: The doctor injects a small amount of a
radioactive substance into your blood vessel. It
travels through the bloodstream and collects in the
bones. A machine called a scanner detects and
measures the radiation. The scanner makes pictures
of the bones. The pictures may show cancer that has
spread to the bones.
- PET scan: You receive an injection of a small
amount of radioactive sugar. The radioactive sugar
gives off signals that the PET scanner picks up. The
PET scanner makes a picture of the places in your
body where the sugar is being taken up. Cancer cells
show up brighter in the picture because they take up
sugar faster than normal cells do. A PET scan shows
whether liver cancer may have spread.
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