Skip to content
Apex Nursing

Chart — Oncology

Common Adult Cancers Comparison

The four highest-yield adult solid tumors — breast, lung, colorectal, and prostate— lined up by risk, screening, hallmark presentation, where they spread, and the nursing focus for each.

Educational use only. Diagnosis, staging, and treatment are provider-directed and individualized. This chart is an educational comparison aid. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

CancerKey risk factorsScreeningHallmarkMetsNursing focus
BreastFemale, age, BRCA1/2, family history, estrogen exposureMammography (± MRI for high risk)Hard, fixed, painless mass; skin dimpling, nipple retraction, peau d'orangeBone, lung, liver, brainAffected-arm/lymphedema precautions; body image; receptor-directed therapy
LungSmoking (dominant), radon, asbestosLow-dose CT (high-risk smokers)Often silent early; cough, hemoptysis, dyspnea, weight lossBrain, bone, liver, adrenalAirway/dyspnea; watch SVC syndrome + paraneoplastic (SIADH); smoking cessation
ColorectalAge ≥45, family history/FAP/Lynch, IBD, low-fiber/high-red-meat dietColonoscopy (gold standard) or FITChange in bowel habits, rectal bleeding, iron-deficiency anemiaLiver (most common)Screening teaching; ostomy care; trend CEA; monitor anemia
ProstateAge, family history/BRCA, African AmericanPSA ± DRE (shared decision)Often asymptomatic; later urinary symptoms; hard nodule on DREBoneContinence (Kegels) & ED support; ADT effects; watch cord compression

Exam Traps

  • Breast: malignant mass = hard, fixed, painless; protect the affected arm after axillary surgery (no BP/IVs/venipuncture).
  • Lung: often silent early, smoking-driven; watch SVC syndrome and paraneoplastic SIADH; low-dose CT screening.
  • Colorectal: colonoscopy screens AND prevents (removes polyps); right-sided = anemia, left-sided = bowel-habit change/bleeding.
  • Prostate: usually slow-growing, spreads to bone; PSA screening is a shared decision; DRE nodule = hard/irregular.
  • Prostate and breast can spread to bone — new bone pain warrants evaluation (and cord-compression vigilance).

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) · National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) · American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →