Treatment is usually started only after trying to figure out the primary cancer. This means a lot of tests will be done, including imaging, blood, and other tests. Lab tests will be done to look for genetic mutations in the cancer cells to help find the primary cancer.
When a primary cancer can't be found, you'll get treatment for CUP. It may be local, systemic, or both. Local treatments remove, destroy, or control cancer cells in one area. Radiation and surgery are local treatments. Systemic treatments are used to destroy or control cancer cells throughout your body. Chemotherapy and hormone therapy are systemic treatments.
You may get just one type of treatment or a combination of treatments.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy (or chemo) is the use of strong medicines that kill cancer cells. One goal of chemo is to shrink or slow the growth of the tumor. It can also help reduce the chance that the cancer will spread. This may ease symptoms or extend your life.
Radiation therapy
Radiation uses strong beams of energy to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. It can be used to kill cancer in one part of the body. It can also be used to ease the symptoms of cancer. There are two kinds of radiation: external and internal. For external radiation, a machine directs radiation at the tumor from outside of the body. For internal radiation, a radioactive source (often in tiny pellets) is put in or near the cancer. This kills the cells close to the source.
Hormone therapy
This treatment keeps certain hormones in the body from helping some types of cancer cells to grow. Stopping hormones can be done in different ways. You may have surgery or radiation. This is done to take out or destroy the organ or organs that make the hormone, like the ovaries or testicles. Other options are getting a medicine that lowers hormone levels or a medicine that makes the cancer cells unable to use them.
Surgery
The goal of surgery is to remove cancer from your body. Because CUP has already spread when it's found, it's not always helpful.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy may be beneficial in some cases of CUP. This treatment targets cancer cells while doing little damage to normal cells. The treatment attacks the way cancer cells grow, divide, and interact with other cells. Talk with your doctor about the possibility of targeted therapy.