Cancer Types Guide
Personalized treatment approaches for each cancer type based on current ASCO and ESMO guidance. Comprehensive information on molecular testing, immunotherapy, targeted therapies, and multidisciplinary care.
Lung Cancer Treatment
Lung cancer arises from the bronchial epithelium and remains one of the leading causes of cancer-related death worldwide. Treatment planning depends on stage, histology, molecular drivers, PD-L1 status, and the patient overall condition.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Cough lasting longer than three weeks or changing in character
- Blood in sputum
- Unexplained shortness of breath
- Hoarseness or difficulty swallowing
- Loss of appetite and weight loss
Diagnostic Methods
NGS Molecular Profile - Key NSCLC Targets
Treatment Options
- Surgery when operable; adjuvant targeted therapy or immunotherapy may be considered according to biomarkers.
- Stereotactic radiotherapy can be an option for selected inoperable patients.
- Concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by durvalumab maintenance is a key standard for eligible patients.
- Multidisciplinary evaluation is essential before treatment.
- Driver mutation present: oral targeted therapy is prioritized.
- No driver mutation: immunotherapy with or without chemotherapy is selected according to PD-L1 and clinical factors.
- Limited-stage disease: concurrent chemoradiotherapy is commonly used.
- Extensive-stage disease: platinum-etoposide plus immunotherapy may be considered.
Frequently Asked Questions
Let Us Review Your NGS Report
Structured molecular consultation and treatment option review.
Breast Cancer Treatment
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide. Hormone receptor status, HER2 expression, stage, genetic risk, and prior therapies shape treatment decisions.
HR+/HER2-
The most common subtype. Endocrine therapy and CDK4/6 inhibitors are central in advanced disease; genomic assays may guide chemotherapy decisions in early disease.
HER2+
Anti-HER2 therapies such as trastuzumab, pertuzumab, T-DM1, and trastuzumab deruxtecan have transformed outcomes.
Triple-negative
A more aggressive subtype where chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and PARP inhibitors in BRCA-related disease may be used.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- New lump or firmness in the breast
- Nipple discharge or inversion
- Skin dimpling or redness
- Change in breast shape
- Enlarged lymph nodes under the arm
Diagnostic Methods
Biomarkers and Genomic Tests
Treatment Options
- Surgery, radiotherapy, systemic therapy, and endocrine treatment are combined according to subtype and stage.
- Neoadjuvant therapy may be preferred for HER2+ and triple-negative disease.
- Endocrine therapy is foundational; CDK4/6 inhibitors are key in advanced disease.
- Bone health and long-term toxicity are monitored.
- Anti-HER2 therapy is used with chemotherapy or as antibody-drug conjugates according to setting.
- Brain metastasis risk and systemic control are evaluated together.
- Chemotherapy and immunotherapy are considered according to stage and PD-L1 status.
- BRCA status can guide PARP inhibitor use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Colorectal Cancer Treatment
Colorectal cancer treatment depends on tumor location, stage, resectability, MSI/MMR status, RAS/BRAF profile, and the patient general condition.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Blood in stool
- Change in bowel habits
- Unexplained anemia
- Abdominal pain or bloating
- Unintentional weight loss
Diagnostic Methods
Colorectal Cancer Biomarkers
Treatment Options
- Surgery is central; chemotherapy is added according to stage and risk.
- Rectal cancer may require radiotherapy or total neoadjuvant therapy.
- Chemotherapy backbones are selected with targeted agents according to RAS/BRAF/MSI status.
- Resectability of liver or lung metastases is reviewed by a multidisciplinary team.
- Checkpoint inhibitors can be a major treatment option in metastatic MSI-H/MMR-deficient tumors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Prostate Cancer Treatment
Prostate cancer ranges from indolent localized disease to aggressive metastatic cancer. Risk group, PSA, Gleason score, imaging, symptoms, and hormonal sensitivity guide treatment.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Often no symptoms early
- Urinary frequency or weak stream
- Bone pain in advanced disease
- Blood in urine or semen
- Unexplained weight loss
Diagnostic Methods
Molecular and Imaging Markers
Treatment Options
- Some low-risk tumors can be monitored carefully.
- Surgery or radiotherapy is considered when treatment is needed.
- Radiotherapy plus androgen deprivation or surgery-based strategies may be used.
- Imaging helps define extent of disease.
- Hormonal therapy is foundational and often intensified with modern androgen receptor pathway inhibitors.
- Chemotherapy, PARP inhibitors, or radioligand therapy may be used in selected settings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Head and Neck Cancer Treatment
Head and neck cancers include tumors of the oral cavity, pharynx, larynx, nasal cavity, salivary glands, and related structures. Treatment aims to control cancer while preserving speech, swallowing, and quality of life.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Non-healing mouth sore
- Hoarseness
- Difficulty swallowing
- Neck mass
- Persistent ear pain or nasal obstruction
Diagnostic Methods
Key Markers
Treatment Options
- Treatment is selected according to site, stage, and functional preservation.
- Reconstruction and rehabilitation may be part of care.
- Chemoradiotherapy or surgery followed by adjuvant therapy may be used.
- Nutrition and swallowing support are important.
- Immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and targeted therapy are considered according to PD-L1 and prior treatment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Digestive System Cancers
Digestive system cancers include esophageal, stomach, pancreatic, liver, biliary tract, small bowel, colorectal, anal, and gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Each requires site-specific staging and biomarker assessment.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Difficulty swallowing
- Persistent abdominal pain
- Jaundice
- Unexplained weight loss
- Blood in stool or black stool
Diagnostic Methods
Common GI Biomarkers
Treatment Options
- Surgery may be combined with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or perioperative systemic therapy.
- Treatment differs by organ and stage.
- Chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted treatments are selected by tumor type and biomarkers.
- Supportive care and nutrition are integral.
- KIT/PDGFRA testing guides tyrosine kinase inhibitor selection.
- Surgery and targeted therapy are combined according to risk.
Frequently Asked Questions
Gynecologic Cancer Treatment
Gynecologic cancers include ovarian, endometrial, cervical, vulvar, and vaginal cancers. Treatment requires coordination between gynecologic oncology, medical oncology, radiation oncology, pathology, and genetics.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Abnormal bleeding
- Pelvic pain or pressure
- Bloating
- Postmenopausal bleeding
- Unusual discharge
Diagnostic Methods
Gynecologic Cancer Biomarkers
Treatment Options
- Cytoreductive surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy are central.
- PARP maintenance may be considered according to BRCA/HRD status.
- Surgery is often first; radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or targeted treatment may be added by risk group.
- MMR/MSI status is increasingly important.
- Early stages may be treated surgically; locally advanced disease often uses chemoradiotherapy.
- Immunotherapy or targeted therapy may be used in advanced disease.
Frequently Asked Questions
Urologic Cancer Treatment
Urologic cancers include kidney, bladder, testicular, upper urinary tract, penile, and related tumors. Treatment depends on organ, stage, histology, risk group, and kidney function.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Blood in urine
- Flank pain
- Testicular lump
- Urinary symptoms
- Unexplained anemia or weight loss
Diagnostic Methods
Markers and Treatment Targets
Treatment Options
- TURBT, intravesical therapy, cystectomy, chemoradiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and antibody-drug conjugates are considered by stage.
- Cisplatin eligibility is a key decision point.
- Localized disease is often treated surgically.
- Advanced clear-cell kidney cancer commonly uses immunotherapy and VEGF/TKI combinations.
- Many testicular cancers are curable even when advanced.
- Treatment depends on seminoma/non-seminoma histology and tumor markers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Skin Cancer Treatment
Skin cancers include basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, and rarer tumors. Early recognition and complete staging are essential.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Changing mole
- Non-healing wound
- Asymmetry or irregular border
- Color variation
- Bleeding or crusting lesion
Diagnostic Methods
Skin Cancer Markers
Treatment Options
- Excision with appropriate margins is central for many skin cancers.
- Sentinel node evaluation may be needed in melanoma.
- Immunotherapy or targeted therapy can reduce recurrence risk in selected high-risk melanoma.
- Immunotherapy and BRAF/MEK targeted therapy are major melanoma options.
- Radiotherapy and local treatments can be used for symptom control.
Frequently Asked Questions
Brain Tumor Treatment
Brain tumors include primary tumors such as gliomas and metastatic tumors from other cancers. Treatment requires neurosurgery, radiation oncology, medical oncology, neuroradiology, pathology, and rehabilitation input.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- New or worsening headache
- Seizures
- Weakness or numbness
- Speech or vision changes
- Personality or cognitive changes
Diagnostic Methods
Brain Tumor Molecular Markers
Treatment Options
- Surgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide-based chemotherapy are used according to tumor type and molecular profile.
- Functional preservation and symptom control are central.
- Stereotactic radiosurgery, surgery, whole-brain radiotherapy, and systemic therapy are selected by number, size, symptoms, and primary cancer type.
- Modern targeted therapies can have meaningful brain activity in selected cancers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sarcomas Soft Tissue and Bone
Sarcomas are rare tumors arising from soft tissue or bone. Correct pathology, expert radiology, surgical planning, and molecular testing are especially important.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Growing painless mass
- Pain or swelling
- Limited movement
- Bone pain or fracture
- Deep soft tissue lump
Diagnostic Methods
Sarcoma Molecular Markers
Treatment Options
- Surgery with correct margins is essential.
- Radiotherapy and chemotherapy are selected by histology, grade, and location.
- Treatment differs widely between sarcoma subtypes.
- Targeted therapies may be important in GIST and rare fusion-positive tumors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Endocrine Tumor Treatment
Endocrine tumors include thyroid cancers, adrenal tumors, neuroendocrine tumors, parathyroid tumors, and related malignancies. Tumor grade, hormone production, receptor expression, and molecular profile guide care.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Neck nodule
- Hormone-related symptoms
- Flushing or diarrhea in NETs
- High blood pressure in adrenal tumors
- Unexplained weight change
Diagnostic Methods
Endocrine Tumor Markers
Treatment Options
- Surgery is central for many thyroid cancers.
- Radioiodine, targeted therapy, or systemic therapy may be used according to subtype.
- Somatostatin analogs, PRRT, targeted therapy, chemotherapy, and liver-directed therapies can be considered.
- Grade and receptor status are crucial.
- Hormonal evaluation and expert surgery are important.
- Systemic therapy is selected by tumor type and stage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Rare Tumors and Tumor-Agnostic Treatments
Rare cancers often require expert pathology review, broad molecular testing, international guideline review, and access to tumor-agnostic or clinical trial options when available.
Risk Factors
Symptoms and Early Diagnosis
- Persistent unexplained mass
- Unusual imaging finding
- Symptoms depending on tumor location
- Unexpected pathology report
- Progression despite standard therapy
Diagnostic Methods
Tumor-Agnostic Targets
Treatment Options
- A second pathology review can change treatment direction.
- Molecular testing can reveal actionable targets.
- Treatment may follow rare tumor guidelines, tumor-agnostic approvals, or clinical trial options.
- Benefit, toxicity, and realistic goals are discussed clearly.
- When the disease changes, prior biopsies, new biopsy, imaging, and NGS can be re-evaluated.
- International recommendations may be useful for very rare diagnoses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Let Us Review Your NGS Report
Structured molecular consultation and treatment option review.
Cancer Types Guide
Personalized treatment approaches for each cancer type based on current ASCO and ESMO guidance. Comprehensive information on molecular testing, immunotherapy, targeted therapies, and multidisciplinary care.
Lung cancer arises from the bronchial epithelium and remains one of the leading causes of cancer-related death worldwide. Treatment planning depends on stage, histology, molecular drivers, PD-L1 status, and the patient overall condition.
- Cough lasting longer than three weeks or changing in character
- Blood in sputum
- Unexplained shortness of breath
- Hoarseness or difficulty swallowing
- Loss of appetite and weight loss
- Surgery when operable; adjuvant targeted therapy or immunotherapy may be considered according to biomarkers.
- Stereotactic radiotherapy can be an option for selected inoperable patients.
- Concurrent chemoradiotherapy followed by durvalumab maintenance is a key standard for eligible patients.
- Multidisciplinary evaluation is essential before treatment.
- Driver mutation present: oral targeted therapy is prioritized.
- No driver mutation: immunotherapy with or without chemotherapy is selected according to PD-L1 and clinical factors.
- Limited-stage disease: concurrent chemoradiotherapy is commonly used.
- Extensive-stage disease: platinum-etoposide plus immunotherapy may be considered.
Let Us Review Your NGS Report
Structured molecular consultation and treatment option review.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women worldwide. Hormone receptor status, HER2 expression, stage, genetic risk, and prior therapies shape treatment decisions.
- New lump or firmness in the breast
- Nipple discharge or inversion
- Skin dimpling or redness
- Change in breast shape
- Enlarged lymph nodes under the arm
- Surgery, radiotherapy, systemic therapy, and endocrine treatment are combined according to subtype and stage.
- Neoadjuvant therapy may be preferred for HER2+ and triple-negative disease.
- Endocrine therapy is foundational; CDK4/6 inhibitors are key in advanced disease.
- Bone health and long-term toxicity are monitored.
- Anti-HER2 therapy is used with chemotherapy or as antibody-drug conjugates according to setting.
- Brain metastasis risk and systemic control are evaluated together.
- Chemotherapy and immunotherapy are considered according to stage and PD-L1 status.
- BRCA status can guide PARP inhibitor use.
Colorectal cancer treatment depends on tumor location, stage, resectability, MSI/MMR status, RAS/BRAF profile, and the patient general condition.
- Blood in stool
- Change in bowel habits
- Unexplained anemia
- Abdominal pain or bloating
- Unintentional weight loss
- Surgery is central; chemotherapy is added according to stage and risk.
- Rectal cancer may require radiotherapy or total neoadjuvant therapy.
- Chemotherapy backbones are selected with targeted agents according to RAS/BRAF/MSI status.
- Resectability of liver or lung metastases is reviewed by a multidisciplinary team.
- Checkpoint inhibitors can be a major treatment option in metastatic MSI-H/MMR-deficient tumors.
Prostate cancer ranges from indolent localized disease to aggressive metastatic cancer. Risk group, PSA, Gleason score, imaging, symptoms, and hormonal sensitivity guide treatment.
- Often no symptoms early
- Urinary frequency or weak stream
- Bone pain in advanced disease
- Blood in urine or semen
- Unexplained weight loss
- Some low-risk tumors can be monitored carefully.
- Surgery or radiotherapy is considered when treatment is needed.
- Radiotherapy plus androgen deprivation or surgery-based strategies may be used.
- Imaging helps define extent of disease.
- Hormonal therapy is foundational and often intensified with modern androgen receptor pathway inhibitors.
- Chemotherapy, PARP inhibitors, or radioligand therapy may be used in selected settings.
Head and neck cancers include tumors of the oral cavity, pharynx, larynx, nasal cavity, salivary glands, and related structures. Treatment aims to control cancer while preserving speech, swallowing, and quality of life.
- Non-healing mouth sore
- Hoarseness
- Difficulty swallowing
- Neck mass
- Persistent ear pain or nasal obstruction
- Treatment is selected according to site, stage, and functional preservation.
- Reconstruction and rehabilitation may be part of care.
- Chemoradiotherapy or surgery followed by adjuvant therapy may be used.
- Nutrition and swallowing support are important.
- Immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and targeted therapy are considered according to PD-L1 and prior treatment.
Digestive system cancers include esophageal, stomach, pancreatic, liver, biliary tract, small bowel, colorectal, anal, and gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Each requires site-specific staging and biomarker assessment.
- Difficulty swallowing
- Persistent abdominal pain
- Jaundice
- Unexplained weight loss
- Blood in stool or black stool
- Surgery may be combined with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or perioperative systemic therapy.
- Treatment differs by organ and stage.
- Chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted treatments are selected by tumor type and biomarkers.
- Supportive care and nutrition are integral.
- KIT/PDGFRA testing guides tyrosine kinase inhibitor selection.
- Surgery and targeted therapy are combined according to risk.
Gynecologic cancers include ovarian, endometrial, cervical, vulvar, and vaginal cancers. Treatment requires coordination between gynecologic oncology, medical oncology, radiation oncology, pathology, and genetics.
- Abnormal bleeding
- Pelvic pain or pressure
- Bloating
- Postmenopausal bleeding
- Unusual discharge
- Cytoreductive surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy are central.
- PARP maintenance may be considered according to BRCA/HRD status.
- Surgery is often first; radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, or targeted treatment may be added by risk group.
- MMR/MSI status is increasingly important.
- Early stages may be treated surgically; locally advanced disease often uses chemoradiotherapy.
- Immunotherapy or targeted therapy may be used in advanced disease.
Urologic cancers include kidney, bladder, testicular, upper urinary tract, penile, and related tumors. Treatment depends on organ, stage, histology, risk group, and kidney function.
- Blood in urine
- Flank pain
- Testicular lump
- Urinary symptoms
- Unexplained anemia or weight loss
- TURBT, intravesical therapy, cystectomy, chemoradiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and antibody-drug conjugates are considered by stage.
- Cisplatin eligibility is a key decision point.
- Localized disease is often treated surgically.
- Advanced clear-cell kidney cancer commonly uses immunotherapy and VEGF/TKI combinations.
- Many testicular cancers are curable even when advanced.
- Treatment depends on seminoma/non-seminoma histology and tumor markers.
Skin cancers include basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, and rarer tumors. Early recognition and complete staging are essential.
- Changing mole
- Non-healing wound
- Asymmetry or irregular border
- Color variation
- Bleeding or crusting lesion
- Excision with appropriate margins is central for many skin cancers.
- Sentinel node evaluation may be needed in melanoma.
- Immunotherapy or targeted therapy can reduce recurrence risk in selected high-risk melanoma.
- Immunotherapy and BRAF/MEK targeted therapy are major melanoma options.
- Radiotherapy and local treatments can be used for symptom control.
Brain tumors include primary tumors such as gliomas and metastatic tumors from other cancers. Treatment requires neurosurgery, radiation oncology, medical oncology, neuroradiology, pathology, and rehabilitation input.
- New or worsening headache
- Seizures
- Weakness or numbness
- Speech or vision changes
- Personality or cognitive changes
- Surgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide-based chemotherapy are used according to tumor type and molecular profile.
- Functional preservation and symptom control are central.
- Stereotactic radiosurgery, surgery, whole-brain radiotherapy, and systemic therapy are selected by number, size, symptoms, and primary cancer type.
- Modern targeted therapies can have meaningful brain activity in selected cancers.
Sarcomas are rare tumors arising from soft tissue or bone. Correct pathology, expert radiology, surgical planning, and molecular testing are especially important.
- Growing painless mass
- Pain or swelling
- Limited movement
- Bone pain or fracture
- Deep soft tissue lump
- Surgery with correct margins is essential.
- Radiotherapy and chemotherapy are selected by histology, grade, and location.
- Treatment differs widely between sarcoma subtypes.
- Targeted therapies may be important in GIST and rare fusion-positive tumors.
Endocrine tumors include thyroid cancers, adrenal tumors, neuroendocrine tumors, parathyroid tumors, and related malignancies. Tumor grade, hormone production, receptor expression, and molecular profile guide care.
- Neck nodule
- Hormone-related symptoms
- Flushing or diarrhea in NETs
- High blood pressure in adrenal tumors
- Unexplained weight change
- Surgery is central for many thyroid cancers.
- Radioiodine, targeted therapy, or systemic therapy may be used according to subtype.
- Somatostatin analogs, PRRT, targeted therapy, chemotherapy, and liver-directed therapies can be considered.
- Grade and receptor status are crucial.
- Hormonal evaluation and expert surgery are important.
- Systemic therapy is selected by tumor type and stage.
Rare cancers often require expert pathology review, broad molecular testing, international guideline review, and access to tumor-agnostic or clinical trial options when available.
- Persistent unexplained mass
- Unusual imaging finding
- Symptoms depending on tumor location
- Unexpected pathology report
- Progression despite standard therapy
- A second pathology review can change treatment direction.
- Molecular testing can reveal actionable targets.
- Treatment may follow rare tumor guidelines, tumor-agnostic approvals, or clinical trial options.
- Benefit, toxicity, and realistic goals are discussed clearly.
- When the disease changes, prior biopsies, new biopsy, imaging, and NGS can be re-evaluated.
- International recommendations may be useful for very rare diagnoses.
Let Us Review Your NGS Report
Structured molecular consultation and treatment option review.