Cancer can spread from where it started (the primary site) to other parts of the body.
- The cancer may spread by directly entering nearby tissues.
- The cancer may spread throughout the body. This is called systemic spread. The cancer cell may get into and travel through the:
- Blood system. Arteries and veins take blood to and from all areas of the body.
- Lymphatic system. A network of lymphatic vessels in all areas of the body that drain and filter infectious agents.
A cancer cell can travel through these systems. With time, the cancer cell can grow and form a new tumor that may not be near the primary site. When cancer spreads to another part of the body, it is called metastatic cancer.
Metastatic cancer is still named for the primary site. For example:
- When cancer that started in the colon is found in the liver, it's called colon cancer that has metastasized to the liver. It is not called liver cancer.
- Lung cancers are those that started from a lung cell. If the cancer spreads to the brain, it's called metastatic lung cancer, not brain cancer.
- When cancer spreads to the nearby lymph nodes, those nodes are said to contain metastatic cancer. (Cancers that start in the lymph cells of a node are called lymphomas.)
If cancer cells are taken out from the metastatic tumor, they will look like the primary cancer cells. These metastatic tumors are also treated like the primary tumors. So colon cancer that has spread or metastasized to the liver is still treated like colon cancer is treated. The cells in the metastatic liver tumor look like the primary cancer cells in the colon. It's not liver cancer; it didn't start in liver cells. It's metastatic colon cancer.
Cancer can metastasize to any part of the body, but the most common sites are:
- Bone
- Brain
- Liver
- Lung
- Lymph nodes