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18 Mar, 2026
There is a common perception that cancer is always treated with surgery.
However, many patients may not require a single operation throughout their cancer journey.
What drives the decision is a mix of things: the cancer type, how far it's spread, where it's sitting, and the patient's condition. Radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted drugs aren't backup options anymore. In many cases, they may be considered primary treatment options.
The Basic Idea: A surgeon removes the tumor along with a thin ring of healthy tissue around it called a margin. That ring reduces the odds of leaving stray cancer cells behind.
But cancer surgery can have different goals, depending on the disease stage:
Curative surgery involves the complete removal of the cancerous tissue when the disease hasn't spread.
Debulking surgery involves removing as much cancer tissue as possible; this approach is considered when the complete removal of the tumor is not possible.
Palliative surgery aims to reduce pain and discomfort in advanced-stage cancer patients. It can involve relieving obstruction caused by tumors, placing stents to hold the airways, blood vessels, and GI tract open, addressing fluid accumulation, and more.
Preventive surgery removes high-risk tissue (sometimes called precancerous) before it turns malignant. A biopsy takes a small sample so the lab can confirm whether or not the tissue is cancerous.
Surgery fits naturally when the cancer has formed a solid mass, it's accessible, and it hasn't spread (localized).
For instance, doctors often approach early breast cancer with a lumpectomy, which removes the growth while preserving most of the breast. Doctors treat early-stage colon cancers by removing the affected bowel segment.
The patient’s overall health status is also a key factor considered before recommending surgery, as anesthesia and recovery can be physically demanding.
Bottom line: Surgery is recommended when the cancer is contained and reachable, and the patient can handle the procedure.
Surgery may not be recommended when:
Advanced Stages: Once cancer has spread to multiple parts of the body, removing the original tumor won’t be sufficient to improve outcomes. The disease becomes systemic and demands a treatment that’s systemic; in other words, you need treatment that acts upon the entire body, like chemotherapy or immunotherapy.
Inoperable/High Surgical Risk: The exact location of the tumor is another factor to consider. Operating on a tumor wrapped around a major artery or tucked into a sensitive part of the brain can be challenging. Radiation or targeted drugs, on the other hand, often reach those spots more safely.
Underlying Health Conditions: Surgery may not be an ideal option for patients with serious heart diseases and poor lung function.
Slow-Growing Cancers: Some cancers may not need surgery at all, or any other treatment for that matter. Low-risk prostate cancer is the classic: it can grow for years and never actually cause a problem. For these patients, active surveillance, regular check-ups, blood tests, scans, etc., may be recommended as disease management approaches.
Blood Cancer: Doctors typically do not recommend surgery for blood cancers. In the case of leukemia, lymphoma, and myeloma, there is no solid mass to remove, so surgery is not an option. Cancer cells are present in the blood and bone marrow. Treatment involves chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted drugs, and stem cell transplants, often combined.
Certain Head and Neck Cancers: Doctors avoid surgery for certain head and neck cancers as well. Early larynx cancer responds well enough to radiation that the vocal cords are preserved. Nasopharyngeal cancer can be treated more safely through chemoradiation.
Anal Cancer: Anal canal cancer gets the same approach; chemoradiation is recommended first to preserve bowel function, and surgery only if the first approach is not effective.
| Treatment | What It Does | Common Uses | Worth Knowing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Radiation | Targets cancer cells with focused energy beams | Head, neck, cervical, prostate, lung | Side effects stay mostly local, preserves organs |
| Chemotherapy | Drug-based; reaches cancer through the bloodstream | Blood cancers, advanced disease, pre/post surgery | Newer protocols are much easier to tolerate |
| Immunotherapy | Stimulating your own immune system to target cancers | Melanoma, lung, bladder, and blood cancers | Responses can last years; doesn’t suit every type |
| Targeted Therapy | Shuts down the proteins that let cancer grow | Tumors with specific gene mutations | Biomarker testing needed; side effects differ from chemo |
| Hormone Therapy | Blocks hormones that certain cancers feed on | Breast, ovarian, endometrial, and prostate cancers, along with adrenal and thyroid cancers | Long-term use: side effects are hormone-related |
| Active Surveillance | Regular monitoring with no immediate treatment | Low-risk prostate, some thyroid cancers | Only starts treatment if cancer begins to progress |
At comprehensive cancer hospitals like HCG, the treatment decisions are typically not made by a single doctor. Cancer cases are usually reviewed by a multidisciplinary tumor board, involving surgeons, medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, nuclear medicine specialists, pathologists, radiologists, rehab specialists, pain management specialists, and general physicians.
Several factors are considered before recommending a customized cancer treatment plan. A certain treatment is included in the plan only after evaluating its pros and cons in relation to the individual health needs of the patient.
What actually goes into the decision:
| Factor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Cancer Type | Blood cancers are never surgical; other types depend entirely on the biology |
| Stage and Spread | A localized tumor may be best treated with surgery; one that has spread needs body-wide treatment |
| Tumor Location | Tumors that are inoperable require treatment approaches other than surgery |
| Biomarker Results | The presence of a specific mutation means it is possible to target that specific cancer through targeted therapy drugs without surgery |
| Patient's Health | The patient should be able to handle anesthesia, the procedure itself, and weeks of recovery |
| Patient's Priorities | Patients' preferences are also taken into consideration; some want to avoid chemo, and some fear surgery. Treatment plans are made based on these preferences. |
Most treatment plans do not involve just one treatment. Neoadjuvant therapy comes before surgery: chemo first shrinks the tumor, making the operation less complicated and safer. A large breast tumor might shrink enough that a lumpectomy replaces what would have been a mastectomy, a real difference in recovery and how someone feels about their body.
Adjuvant therapy follows surgery; it targets microscopic disease that the surgeon could not remove during the procedure. Examples of adjuvant therapy include radiation post-lumpectomy and chemotherapy after bowel surgery. The visible part gets removed; the invisible part gets treated.
What This Means in Practice: Chemotherapy before surgery isn't a sign that things have gone sideways. It's a calculated move to make the surgery do more with less.
People often feel like they're supposed to just go along with what the doctors say. However, these questions are completely fair to ask:
Surgery is one of the powerful pillars of cancer treatment, but 'powerful' may not always mean 'appropriate.' Radiation, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted drugs, and watchful waiting are all evidence-based paths depending on how the cancer is progressing and what the patient needs.
At HCG Cancer Hospital, every case runs through a multidisciplinary review before anyone commits to a plan. Surgical, medical, and radiation oncology specialists look at the full picture together, building a recommendation that fits the person, not just the scan.
If you're trying to figure out your next steps after a diagnosis, the most grounding thing is an honest conversation with an oncologist about what actually applies to your situation.
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always speak with a qualified healthcare provider about your specific situation.
Disclaimer: This information is intended to educate patients and caregivers. It does not replace professional medical advice. All treatment decisions should be made in consultation with a qualified doctor.