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Carcinoma of Unknown Primary Treatment (PDQ®)
Patient Version   Health Professional Version   En español   Last Modified: 06/13/2008



Description






Stage Explanation






Treatment Option Overview






Newly Diagnosed Carcinoma of Unknown Primary






Recurrent Carcinoma of Unknown Primary






To Learn More About Carcinoma of Unknown Primary






Get More Information From NCI






Changes to This Summary (06/13/2008)






About PDQ



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Newly Diagnosed Carcinoma of Unknown Primary

If the cancer is in the neck area (cervical lymph nodes), treatment may be one of the following:

  1. Surgery to remove the tonsils (tonsillectomy).
  2. Radiation therapy.
  3. Radiation therapy followed by surgery.
  4. Neck surgery (radical neck dissection).
  5. Neck surgery followed by radiation therapy.

(Refer to the PDQ summary on Metastatic Squamous Neck Cancer With Occult Primary for more information.)

If the cancer is a poorly differentiated carcinoma (the cancer cells look very different than normal cells), the treatment will probably be chemotherapy. Surgery or radiation therapy has also been used for patients with neuroendocrine (nervous system and hormonal system) cancer.

If the cancer is peritoneal adenocarcinomatosis (the tumor is in the lining inside the abdomen), the treatment will probably be chemotherapy.

If the cancer is an isolated axillary nodal metastasis, it is likely that the cancer started in the lung or breast. If female, a mammogram (an x-ray picture of the breast) will be used to check for breast cancer. After tests to check for lung and breast cancer, the treatment may be one of the following:

  1. Surgery to remove the lymph nodes with or without surgery to remove the breast (mastectomy) or radiation therapy to the breast.
  2. Treatment as described above plus chemotherapy that is used for breast cancer.

If the cancer is in the inguinal nodes, the treatment may be one of the following:

  1. Surgery to remove the cancer.
  2. Groin surgery (superficial groin dissection).
  3. Surgery to remove some of the tumor (biopsy) with or without radiation therapy, surgery to remove the lymph nodes, or chemotherapy.

If the cancer is melanoma that has spread to a single nodal site, the treatment will probably be surgery to remove the lymph nodes.

If there is cancer in several different areas of the body and the doctor thinks that the origin of the cancer is one for which there is standard systemic therapy, then that therapy should be given. The following are examples:

  1. Hormone therapy for prostate cancer.
  2. Chemotherapy or hormone therapy for breast cancer.
  3. Chemotherapy for ovarian cancer.

If the source of the cancer cannot be found, then the best treatment may not be known. Patients may want to consider taking part in a clinical trial.

Check for U.S. clinical trials from NCI's PDQ Cancer Clinical Trials Registry that are now accepting patients with newly diagnosed carcinoma of unknown primary. For more specific results, refine the search by using other search features, such as the location of the trial, the type of treatment, or the name of the drug. General information about clinical trials is available from the NCI Web site.

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