About Us
|
For the Media
|
For Health Professionals
Find a Doctor
Medical Services
Bariatric & Metabolic Services
Bloodless Medicine
Breast Microsurgery
Cancer Care
CyberKnife RadioSurgery
da Vinci Robotic Surgery
Diabetes Treatment
Digestive & Lung Health
Emergency Services
Heart & Vascular Center
Hemangioma Treatment
Home Care Services
Hyperbaric & Undersea Medicine
Imaging Services
Lifeline Medical Alert System
Neurosciences & Spine Services
O-arm® Imaging System
Orthopaedic & Joint Replacement
Palliative Medicine Services
Rehab Services
Rehabilitation Hospital
Ryan White Program
Sleep/Wake Disorders
Surgical Services
Uterine Fibroid Embolization Clinic
Women's Services
Locations
After Hours Care
Diagnostic Centers
Hospitals
Lowcountry Senior Center
Medshare Specialty Care
Outpatient Surgery
Specialty Clinics
Thomas Bennett House
Urgent Care & ER
Patients & Visitors
The Stores at Roper St. Francis
Nursing at Roper St. Francis
Our Code of Conduct
Advance Directives
Financial Counseling
Hospitalist Services
Insurance & Billing Services
Maps & Directions
Mission Department
Pastoral Care Services
Patient & Visitor Guide
Patient Representatives
Phone Directory
Patient Rights & Responsibilities
Travel Information
Volunteer Services
Health Resources
Health Hub Blog
Advantage
House Calls TV
Caring Bridge
Classes & Events
eNewsletter
Health Library
House Calls Magazine
Risk Assessments
Video Library
Virtual Tours
Online Tools
Pay Your Bill
Patient Pre-registration
Register for a Class
Request an Appointment
Schedule a Mammogram
Find a Doctor
Make a Donation
MyHealth Patient Portal
HAVE A QUESTION? Need a doctor referral? Call (843) 402-CARE
Skip to Content
About Us
|
News Center
|
Contact Us
Search Site
Go
Have a Question? (843) 402-CARE (2273)
Home
Find a Doctor
Find a Doc
Physicians Partners
Departments & Services
Bariatric & Metabolic Services
Bloodless Medicine
Breast Microsurgery
Cancer Care
CyberKnife RadioSurgery
da Vinci Surgical System
Diabetes Treatment
Digestive & Lung Health
Emergency Services
Heart & Vascular Center
Hemangioma Treatment
Home Care Services
Hyperbaric & Undersea Medicine
Imaging Services
Lifeline Medical Alert System
NanoKnife IRE System
Neurosciences & Spine Services
O-arm Imaging System
Orthopaedics & Joint Replacement
Palliative Medicine Services
Rehabilitation Hospital
Rehab Services
Ryan White Program
Senior Services
Sleep/Wake Disorders
Surgical Services
Uterine Fibroid Embolization Clinic
Women's Services
Facilities
After Hours Care
Specialty Clinics
Diagnostic Centers
Hospitals
Lowcountry Senior Center
Medshare Specialty Care
Outpatient Surgery
Thomas Bennett House
Urgent Care & ER
Patients & Visitors
Advance Directives
Financial Counseling
Hospitalists Services
Insurance & Billing Services
Maps & Directions
Mission Department
Nursing at Roper St. Francis
Our Code of Conduct
Pastoral Care Services
Patient & Visitor Guide
Patient Pre-registration
Patient Representatives
Phone Directory
Rights & Responsibilities
The Stores at Roper St. Francis
Travel Information
Volunteer Services
Health Resources
Advantage
Caring Bridge
Celebrating our Patients
Classes & Events
Drug Reference
eNewsletter
Health Library
House Calls Magazine
iTriage Symptom Checker
Interactive Tools
Multimedia Library
Online Community
Virtual Tours
News & Events
Celebrating our Patients
Classes & Events
eNewsletter
News Center
Speaker’s Bureau
Health Professionals
Affiliate Program
Board Portal
CME Calendar
Deficit Reduction Act Notification
Educational Videos
Employee Portal
Publications
Vendor Login
Careers
Search & Apply for Jobs
Charleston at a Glance
Employee Benefits
Mentoring Programs
New Employees
Nursing Careers
Physician Careers
Health Library
Home
En español
Library
Multimedia
Healthy Living
Health Centers
Asthma
Cancer
About Cancer
Cancer and Genetics
Cancer Tests and Procedures
Cancer Diagnosis
Cancer and Nutrition
Cancer Treatment
Cancer Treatment Side Effects
Living with Cancer
Specific Cancers
Children and Cancer
More Resources
Dictionary
Health News
Interactive Tools
Multimedia
Online Resources
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
Diabetes
Heart Disease
Neuroscience
Obesity and Bariatric Surgery
Orthopedics
Pregnancy & Newborns
Your Family
Interactive Tools
About This Site
Home
/
Health Centers
/
Cancer
/
Specific Cancers
Health Encyclopedia
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Search
Go
Cancer
Specific Cancers
Adrenal Cancer
The adrenal glands are located on top of the kidneys and produce certain hormones. Adrenal cancer, also called adrenocortical cancer, is rare.
Anal Cancer
Different types of tumors can form in the anus. Some, like polyps, are not benign; others can be patches of irregular cells that can become cancerous.
Bile Duct Cancer
The majority of bile duct cancers develop in the part of the ducts that are outside the liver and are sometimes referred to as extrahepatic tumors.
Bladder Cancer
Bladder cancer affects men four times more often than women, and the risk for this cancer also increases with age.
Bone Cancer
Bone cancer, or primary bone cancer, is cancer that begins in your bones. Primary bone cancer is different from secondary bone cancer, which starts in other parts of the body and later spreads to the bones.
Brain and Central Nevous Cancer
Brain tumors can be either benign or cancerous. Cancerous brain tumors usually grow quickly and invade surrounding tissue.
Breast Cancer
Breast cancer includes a wide range of cancers of the breast. Except for skin cancer, it is the most common cancer in women.
Carcinoma of Unknown Primary
This type of cancer is found after it has spread from its original location. With testing, doctors may be able to tell where the cancer originated, which helps with treatment.
Cervical Cancer
Abnormal cells can appear on the surface of the cervix and are considered precancerous. If these cells spread deeper into the cervix, or to other tissues or organs, the disease is called cervical cancer.
Colorectal Cancer
Because colon cancer and rectal cancers have many features in common, they are sometimes referred to together as colorectal cancer.
Endometrial Cancer
Endometrial carcinoma is a cancer that begins in the lining of the uterus. It most often occurs in women who have gone through menopause.
Esophageal Cancer
Esophageal cancer is cancer that develops in the esophagus, the muscular tube that connects the throat to the stomach. The wall of the esophagus is made up of several layers of cells, and cancers generally start from the inner layer and grow out.
Ewing's Sarcoma
Ewing sarcoma is primary a childhood cancer that most frequently occurs between ages 10 to 20 years old. This type of cancer can start either in a bone or soft tissue. Most cases result from a specific rearrangement of chromosomes.
Eye Cancer
Eye cancer is a very rare kind of cancer that starts somewhere in or on the eye or in the skin of cells around the eye.
Gallbladder Cancer
The gallbladder is a small organ that lies under your liver. Most gallbladder cancer cases occur in people older than 70. This type of cancer strikes women about twice as often as men.
Head and Neck Cancer
This type of cancer can begin in any of these places: larynx, nasal cavity, mouth, paranasal sinuses, throat, or salivary glands.
Hodgkin's Disease
Hodgkin disease is a type of lymphoma, a cancer in the lymphatic system. The disease causes the cells in the lymphatic system to abnormally reproduce, eventually making the body less able to fight infection.
Kaposi's Sarcoma
A sarcoma is a cancer that grows in body tissues. In Kaposi’s sarcoma, the cancer cells grow below the skin, although they can also grow in the mucous membranes in the nose, mouth, lung, and anus.
Kidney Cancer
Kidney cancer begins in the kidneys. Renal is the Latin word for kidney, and kidney cancer may also be referred to as renal cancer.
Laryngeal Cancer
The larynx is often referred to as the voice box. The cartilage in front of the larynx is sometimes called the "Adam's apple." Laryngeal cancer is cancer that occurs in either of these parts, or in the vocal cords.
Leukemia - General
Leukemia is cancer of the blood cells—usually the white blood cells. Doctors divide leukemia into four main types, and those four into several subtypes.
Leukemia - Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)
Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) occurs when too many lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell, are produced in the body. Acute means the leukemia can occur quickly and tends to progress rapidly.
Leukemia - Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a type of cancer in which the bone marrow makes abnormal
myeloblasts
. They do not mature into healthy white blood cells. AML may also make abnormal red blood cells and platelets.
Leukemia - Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a type of leukemia in which the body produces too many white blood cells called lymphocytes.
Leukemia - Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML)
Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is found mostly in adults and is a slow-growing type of leukemia. This means that you may not be diagnosed right away because, at first, there are no symptoms.
Liver Cancer
Liver cancer is a rare cancer that starts in the cells of the liver. Doctors have divided this cancer into four main types.
Lung Cancer
Nearly all lung cancers are carcinomas, a cancer that begins in the lining or covering tissues of an organ. Smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer.
Malignant Mesothelioma
Mesothelioma is a rare type of cancer that starts in the cells that form the mesothelium. This is the lining that protects the internal organs such as the lungs, stomach, and heart.
Multiple Myeloma
Multiple myeloma is a rare cancer that begins in a type of white blood cell called the plasma cell. Plasma cells are found in the bone marrow.
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma is a cancer of the lymphatic system, part of the body's immune system. Cancerous cells in the lymphatic system cause the lymph glands to swell.
Oral Cancer
Oral cancer is cancer found in the mouth or in the throat area at the back of the mouth. The main causes of this type of cancer are tobacco and alcohol use.
Ovarian Cancer
Many types of tumors can start growing in the ovaries. Some are benign, but others are cancerous tumors.
Pancreatic Cancer
The pancreas is located behind the stomach. Pancreatic cancer starts in this organ, often spreading into the nearby bile ducts and lymph nodes in your abdomen.
Penile Cancer
Penile cancer is a rare kind of cancer that begins in the cells of the penile tissue. It is rarely found in men in the United States.
Pituitary Cancer
A pituitary tumor is a tumor that grows in the pituitary gland - a small gland located behind the nasal sinuses and above the roof the mouth at the base of the skull. The pituitary gland regulates most of the other glands in the body.
Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer starts in the prostate gland. More than 90 percent of all prostate cancers are discovered while they are either in or still near the prostate.
Skin Cancer - Melanoma
Melanoma is a disease of the skin in which cancer cells are found in the melanocytes, the cells that produce color in the skin.
Skin Cancer - Non-Melanoma
Skin cancer is a malignant tumor that grows in the skin cells. Most skin cancers appear in older people, but skin damage from the sun begins at an early age.
Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Soft tissue makes up muscles, tendons, blood vessels, fat, nerves, and deep skin tissues, but not bones or other organs. A sarcoma is a cancer. In general, soft tissue sarcomas are rare.
Stomach Cancer
Stomach cancer, also known as gastric cancer, is cancer that starts in any part of the stomach. Infection with
Helicobacter pylori
is considered a possible risk factor for this cancer.
Testicular Cancer
Cancer that develops in a testicle is called testicular cancer. Testicular cancer is very treatable and is one of the most curable forms of cancer if found early.
Thymus Cancer
Thymus cancer is rare and occurs in the thymus, a small organ in the front part of the chest under the breastbone. The thymus produces an immune system cell called a T-lymphocyte.
Thyroid Cancer
The thyroid gland is located in the neck - under the Adam's apple and above the collarbone. Cancer of the thyroid occurs more often in younger adults.
Urethral Cancer
Urethral cancer is a rare form of cancer that develops in the tube that carries urine from the bladder to an opening on the outside of the body.
Uterine Cancer
Cancer of the uterus can spread through the bloodstream or lymphatic system and is the most common cancer of the female reproductive tract.
Vaginal Cancer
Cancer of the vagina, a rare kind of cancer in women, is a disease in which malignant cells are found in the tissues of the vagina.
Vulvar Cancer
The vulva is the external portion of the female genital organs. Vulvar cancer is a rare malignancy that can occur on any part of the vulva, but most often in the labia majora or labia minora.
Other Cancers
Learn more from the National Cancer Institute on rare cancers such as AIDS-related lymphoma, germ cell tumors, and tumors of the oropharynx.