Treatment for your brain or spine tumor will depend on your tumor type and location, and your general health.
Surgery
If possible, you will have surgery to treat brain or spine tumors and help relieve symptoms. Surgery removes as much of the tumor as possible while not damaging healthy tissue. It is most successful when performed by a neurosurgeon with expertise treating your tumor type. Your neuro-oncologist and healthcare team will work with you and your loved ones to create a treatment plan just for you and help coordinate your care.
If you have a brain or spine tumor, you should be under the care of a neuro-oncologist. A neuro-oncologist is specially trained to treat patients with central nervous system (CNS) tumors. If you are being seen by an oncologist or primary care doctor, ask for a referral to a neuro-oncologist for a second opinion or for treatment.
Outcomes and Risk Study
Help us improve care for patients with rare CNS tumors by participating in an online survey. The survey will ask you questions about your symptoms, treatments, and quality of life during and after cancer.
Further Treatment
After surgery or if you don’t have surgery, you may have other treatments depending on your tumor type and grade. Low grade tumors (grade I and II) may be completely removed with surgery but may require radiation and/or chemotherapy. High grade tumors (grade III and IV) are more difficult to remove and require additional treatments such as radiation and/or chemotherapy. You may also choose to join a clinical trial to test new treatments.
Clinical trials are research studies that involve people. Clinical trials provide doctors the opportunity to learn about new therapies that could be successful to treat your tumor. NCI-CONNECT has clinical trials you can take part in at the NIH.
During treatment you may have physical or cognitive changes that greatly affect your quality of life. This can be challenging for you and your loved ones. Keep a dairy of your treatment symptoms and talk to your doctor about them. Your doctor may change your treatment plan so you can continue to live fully.
We understand making treatment decisions can be overwhelming and symptoms and side effects can take a toll on both your body and your feelings. Use these resources to help you make the best decisions for your care, treatment, and quality of life.
Guiding Questions
Referrals
Find doctors and nurses with experience treating rare CNS tumors.
- Questions to Ask Your Doctor About Your Treatment
- Questions to Ask Your Doctor About Clinical Trials
- Questions to Ask Your Doctor About Support
It is important to the success of your treatment to find a doctor that has experience treating your tumor type. And given brain and spine tumors are rare, there are few centers that have doctors with that level of expertise. Use our network of healthcare professionals to find an experienced doctor near you and get a second opinion.
Brain Tumor Patient Education and Support
Read how the first national advocacy organization for brain tumor education and information is expanding its services and collaborating to improve care and treatment.
Treatment Resources
- Types of Cancer Treatment
- Side Effects
- Clinical Trials Information
- Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Coping and Support Resources
- Coping with a Rare Brain and Spine Tumor Diagnosis
- Feelings and Cancer
- Adjusting to Cancer
- Self-Image & Sexuality
- Day-to-Day Life
- Support for Caregivers
- Support Groups
- Brain and Spine Tumor Organizations
- Support Services Organizations
This content is provided by the National Cancer Institute (www.cancer.gov)
Source URL: https://www.cancer.gov/publishedcontent/syndication/1121723.htm
Source Agency: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Captured Date: 2018-09-17 22:10:39.0