THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Medical Information--Home Edition
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Subject

Small Intestine Cancer

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  • Blood in the stool is a common symptom, but sometimes the cancer blocks the intestine causing crampy abdominal pain, and vomiting.
  • The diagnosis is based on various intestinal viewing techniques, including endoscopy and barium x-rays.
  • Surgical removal is the best form of treatment.

Cancerous (malignant) tumors in the small intestine are very uncommon, occurring in fewer than 6,000 people in the United States each year. Adenocarcinoma is the most common type of cancer of the small intestine. Adenocarcinomas develop in the glandular cells of the lining of the small intestine. People with Crohn's disease of the small intestine are more likely than others to develop adenocarcinoma.

Rare Types of Small-Intestinal Cancer

Carcinoid tumors can develop in the glandular cells that line the small intestine. Carcinoid tumors often secrete hormones that cause diarrhea and flushing of the skin. Chemotherapy and other types of drugs sometimes help control the symptoms caused by carcinoid tumors.

Lymphoma (cancer of the lymphatic system) may develop in the middle section (jejunum) or the lower section (ileum) of the small intestine. Lymphoma may cause a segment of intestine to become rigid or elongated. This cancer is more common among people with celiac sprue. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy can help control symptoms and sometimes lengthen survival time.

Leiomyosarcomas develop in the muscle cells in the wall of the small intestine. Chemotherapy may slightly lengthen survival time after surgery to remove leiomyosarcomas.

Symptoms and Diagnosis

Adenocarcinoma may cause bleeding into the intestine, which shows up as blood in the stool, and obstruction, which in turn may lead to crampy abdominal pain, expansion (distention) of the abdomen, and vomiting.

A doctor may use an endoscope (a flexible viewing tube) passed through the mouth and down to the duodenum and part of the jejunum (the upper section of the small intestine) to locate the tumor and perform a biopsy (remove a tissue sample for examination under a microscope). A doctor can sometimes see tumors of the ileum (the lower section of the small intestine) by passing a colonoscope (an endoscope used to view the lower part of the digestive tract) through the anus, through the entire large intestine, and up into the ileum. A barium x-ray can show the entire small intestine and may be used to outline the tumor. A wireless video capsule camera (see Symptoms and Diagnosis of Digestive Disorders: Capsule Endoscopy) can also be used to show tumors of the small intestine. Arteriography (an x-ray taken after a radiopaque dye is injected into an artery) of the intestinal arteries may be performed, especially if the tumor is bleeding. Similarly, radioactive technetium can be injected into the artery and observed on x-rays as it leaks into the intestine. This procedure helps locate sites where the tumor is bleeding. The bleeding can then be corrected surgically. Sometimes exploratory surgery is needed to identify a tumor in the small intestine.

Treatment

The best treatment for all types of cancerous growths is surgical removal of the tumor. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy after surgery do not lengthen survival time.

Last full review/revision December 2007 by Elliot M. Livstone, MD

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