
Tips för att besegra tarmcancer
Granskad av Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGP Senast uppdaterad av Dr Sarah JarvisSenast uppdaterad 29 Sept 2017
Uppfyller patientens redaktionella riktlinjer
- Ladda nerLadda ner
- Dela
- Language
- Diskussion
- Ljudversion
- Lägg till i föredragna källor på Google
Of course nobody wants cancer, and you may believe it’s easier not to think about it. But bowel cancer doesn't go away just because you ignore it. And if you do have it, getting treatment early can save your life. It also means you’re likely to need less extreme treatment, with fewer side effects.
Bowel cancer symptoms
Bowel cancer is the third most common cancer in the UK - one in 19 women and one in 14 men will be diagnosed with it at some point. Some cancers are hard to spot until a very late stage - pancreatic cancer and lung cancer are good examples. Sadly, the later your cancer is diagnosed, the worse the outcome is likely to be.
Bowel cancer usually starts in your colon (large bowel) or rectum (just inside your bottom) and symptoms include:
Bleeding or passing mucus from your back passage.
A change from your usual bowel habit, particularly to looser or more frequent stools (poos).
Tummy pain.
Losing weight, being tired or losing your appetite for no reason.
Tjocktarmscancerscreening
By screening people at high risk of bowel cancer, treatment can be offered at a much earlier stage, when it's less invasive, has fewer side effects and is more likely to offer a cure. That's why the NHS has introduced a national bowel cancer screening programme.
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, everyone is invited to take part in NHS bowel cancer screening every two years from the ages of 60-74. In Scotland everyone from 50-74 is invited to take part. There are two ways people are invited to have bowel cancer screening. The standard one is a test called FOB (faecal occult blood) which looks for tiny traces of blood in your stool.
One of the early signs of bowel cancer can be tiny amounts of blood, too small for you to see. They happen because tumours are made up of abnormal cells which don't have the same protective cover as normal bowel. That means they're more likely to bleed when your stool rubs against them. Blood from just inside your back passage tends to be bright red, and you see it on the outside of your stool, on toilet paper when you wipe yourself or in the pan. Blood from higher up in your bowel turns dark red or black by the time it comes out - large amounts can lead to black, tarry stools. But small amounts may not be visible - and that's where the FOB test comes in.
The invitation for FOB screening will come in the post every two years, and includes everything you need to do the test. It usually involves collecting three tiny samples of separate stools onto a special card (some cancers don't bleed all the time, so three samples from different days gives a more accurate result). You then pop the card into the hygienically sealed freepost envelope provided and send it off. It's estimated if everyone invited took the NHS bowel screening test, we could cut death rates from bowel cancer by 16%!
Taking aspirin to reduce the risk of bowel cancer
Taking a regular 'baby aspirin' (75 mg) tablet a day may reduce the risk of colon or rectal cancer. Recent studies suggest that taking this dose daily for 10 years between the age of 50 and 65 could reduce the risk of bowel cancer by a third. If you've had a heart attack or stroke, you should definitely be taking this anyway unless there's a medical reason you shouldn't. However, aspirin does carry a risk of bleeding from the stomach, so for some people the risks might outweigh the benefits. Speak to your doctor before you start on a regular dose.
What does an abnormal FOB test result mean?
About 49 out of 50 will have a normal bowel cancer screening result, which you’ll receive in the post within around two weeks. Sometimes the result is uncertain and you’ll be asked to repeat the test - most people who do this end up having a normal result. If you're one of the remaining few who have an abnormal result, you'll be invited to see a specialist for a procedure called a colonoscopy - this involves taking medicine to clean your bowel out and putting a thin flexible telescope into your bowel through your bottom. About 90% of people who have this are found not to have bowel cancer.
Bowel scope screening
The other bowel cancer screening test is a bowel 'scope' which is being rolled out in England as a one-off test at the age of 55. It's rather like a colonoscopy but is even quicker and easier. You empty the lower end of your bowel using an enema just before the scope, and don't need an anaesthetic.
Because it allows small polyps that could turn cancerous to be removed, it does even more than pick up cancer early, when it's more treatable. It actually prevents cancer. People who have a one-off bowel scope are 35% less likely to be diagnosed with bowel cancer and 40% less likely to die from it - and the benefits last at least 17 years. It's all over in under half an hour and most people say it's only mildly uncomfortable. I'd call that a very small price to pay for peace of mind.
With thanks to 'My Weekly' magazine where this article was originally published.
Patientval för Tjocktarmscancer

Cancer
Sätt att minska risken för tjocktarmscancer
Det finns omkring 46 600 nya fall av tarmcancer i Storbritannien varje år - det är cirka 130 personer varje dag. Tarmcancer är den fjärde vanligaste cancerformen i Storbritannien och står för 12 % av alla nya cancerfall enligt Cancer Research UK. Men även om de övergripande tarmcancerraterna minskar, ökar antalet under 50 år som har tillståndet. Oavsett din ålder finns det många saker du kan göra för att minska risken för att få tarmcancer. Här delar gastroenterologen och tarmcancerspecialisten Dr Monique van Leerdam med sig av sina råd.
av Lynn Stephen

Cancer
Vad du behöver veta om tarmundersökning
Sadly, despite all the evidence of benefit from bowel screening, almost half of people in the UK don't take up the opportunity when they're invited. If everyone did, we could cut death rates from bowel cancer by a whopping 16%, saving thousands of lives a year.
av Dr Sarah Jarvis
Om författarenVisa fullständig biografi

Dr Sarah Jarvis
Klinisk konsult
MA (Cantab), BM, BCh (Oxon), DRCOG, FRCGP, MBE
Efter att ha utbildat sig i medicin vid Cambridge och Oxford blev Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE allmänläkare.
Om recensentenVisa fullständig biografi

Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGP
Allmänläkare, Medicinsk Författare
MBChB (1992), DRCOG, DFFP, MRCOG (Part 1) MRCGP (2007), DFSRH (2013), MSc - medical education (2020)
Dr Hayley Willacy var en NHS-läkare som arbetade i nordvästra England och gick i pension från klinisk praktik 2022 efter 30 år.
Artikelhistorik
Informationen på denna sida är granskad av kvalificerade kliniker.
Artikeln finns också på Engelska, Tyska, Spanska, Franska, Italienska, Portugisiska, Hindi, Hebreiska, Arabiska, och Svenska.
29 Sept 2017 | Senaste versionen

Fråga, dela, anslut.
Bläddra i diskussioner, ställ frågor och dela erfarenheter inom hundratals hälsorelaterade ämnen.

Känner du dig sjuk?
Bedöm dina symtom online gratis
Anmäl dig till Patientens nyhetsbrev
Din veckovisa dos av tydliga, pålitliga hälsoråd - skrivna för att hjälpa dig känna dig informerad, självsäker och i kontroll.
Genom att prenumerera accepterar du våra Sekretesspolicy. Du kan avsluta prenumerationen när som helst. Vi säljer aldrig dina uppgifter.
Mer om cancer
- UppdateradKan du vara för gammal för ett cellprov?
- Cancertrötthet: vad det är och hur man hanterar det
- Livmoderhalscancer är inte roligt, men att skratta åt det hjälpte mig att hantera det
- Tecken på livmoderhalscancer och vad man ska vara uppmärksam på
- Påverkar testikelcancer din fertilitet?
- Allt du behöver veta om cancerundersökningar
- Hur min äggstockscancer missades: Natasha berättar sin historia
- Hur man kontrollerar för bröstcancer och hur en knöl känns
- Hur man undersöker sig själv för testikelcancer
- Hur man hanterar en obotlig sjukdom vid jul
- Är det prostatacancer eller något annat?
- Ivermectin förklarat: fakta, bevis och vanliga myter
- NHS lanserar världens första blodprov för cancer
- Supporting a loved one with a cancer diagnosis
- Vad påverkar dina chanser att överleva livmoderhalscancer?
- Vilka är de tidiga varningstecknen på blodcancer?
- Vilka är stadierna av lungcancer?
- Hur det är att ha bröstcancer när du är man
- Hela kroppens 3D-kartläggning av födelsemärken: framtiden för hudhälsa?
- Varför är svarta män mer benägna att dö av prostatacancer?