Stages, types and grades
Tumour describes the size of the tumour. This is a simplified description of the T stage.
Tis means carcinoma in situ. The cancer is at its earliest stage and only in the bowel lining (mucosa).
T1 means the tumour is only in the inner layer of the bowel.
T2 means the tumour has grown into the muscle layer of the bowel wall.
T3 means the tumour has grown through the muscle layer of the bowel wall and into the tissues surrounding the bowel. It has not gone through the tissue layer covering the outside of the bowel (peritoneum).
T4 is split into 2 stages, T4a and T4b:
T4a means the tumour has grown through the outer lining of the bowel wall and has spread into the tissue layer (peritoneum) covering the organs in the tummy (abdomen)
T4b means the tumour has grown through the bowel wall into nearby organs
Node (N) describes whether the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes.
There are 3 possible stages describing whether cancer cells are in the – N0, N1 and N2:
N0 means there are no lymph nodes containing cancer cells.
N1 is split into 3 stages – N1a, N1b and N1c:
N1a means there are cancer cells in 1 nearby lymph node
N1b means there are cancer cells in 2 or 3 nearby lymph nodes
N1c means the nearby lymph nodes don’t contain cancer, but there are cancer cells in tissue near the tumour. These cancer cells are separate from the main tumour.
N2 is split into 2 stages – N2a and N2b:
N2a means there are cancer cells in 4 to 6 nearby lymph nodes
N2b means there are cancer cells in more than 7 nearby lymph nodes
Metastasis (M) describes whether the cancer has spread to a different part of the body.
There are 2 stages of cancer spread (metastasis):
M0 means the cancer has not spread to other organs.
M1 means the cancer has spread to other parts of the body such as the lung or liver. It is split into 3 stages, M1a, M1b and M1c:
• M1a means the cancer has spread to 1 distant site or organ, for example the liver, but it hasn’t spread to the tissue lining your tummy (peritoneum)
• M1b means the cancer has spread to 2 or more distant sites or organs, but it hasn’t spread to the tissue lining your peritoneum
• M1c means the cancer may have spread to distant organs and it has spread to your peritoneum
The stage of your cancer helps your doctor to decide which treatment you need. Treatment also depends on:
your type of cancer (the type of cells the cancer started in)
where the cancer is in your bowel (colon or rectum)
other health conditions that you have
The stage of the cancer and these other factors can also give an idea of your outlook (prognosis).
The main treatments for cancer of the large bowel (colon cancer) are:
surgery
chemotherapy
The main treatments for cancer of the back passage (rectal cancer) are:
surgery
radiotherapy
chemotherapy
chemotherapy and radiotherapy together (chemoradiotherapy)
Find out about treatment for bowel cancer
For bowel cancer that has spread (advanced cancer) you might have these treatments as well as:
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Last reviewed: 18 Oct 2024
Next review due: 18 Oct 2027
The stage of a cancer tells you how far it has grown through the bowel wall and whether it has spread to nearby lymph nodes or other organs. It helps your doctor to know which treatment you need.
Treatment depends on whether you have colon or rectal cancer, as well as your cancer stage. You might have surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy or a combination of these.
Living with bowel (colorectal) cancer may mean you have changes to your diet, sex life or body image. There is support to help you cope.
Metastatic bowel cancer is cancer that has spread from the back passage (rectum) and large intestines (colon) to other parts of the body, such as the liver. It is also called advanced cancer. Treatment includes chemotherapy, surgery, targeted cancer drugs and radiotherapy.
Bowel cancer means cancer that starts in the colon (large bowel) or back passage (rectum). It is also known as colorectal cancer.

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