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  1. Stage I (1) cancer: The tumor is smaller and contained to one area. It hasn’t spread to nearby lymph nodes or other areas of your body. Stage II (2) cancer: The tumor has grown larger and possibly spread to nearby lymph nodes. Stage III (3) cancer: The tumor has grown deeper into surrounding tissues and has potentially spread to nearby lymph ...

  2. What is a cancer grade? A cancer’s grade describes how abnormal the cancer cells and tissue look under a microscope when compared to healthy cells. Cancer cells that look and organize most like healthy cells and tissue are low grade tumors. Doctors describe these cancers as being well differentiated.

  3. Grade: For most cancers, the grade is a measure of how abnormal the cancer cells look under the microscope. This is also called differentiation. Grade can be important because cancers with more abnormal-looking cells tend to grow and spread faster.

  4. Apr 15, 2020 · Tumors are traditionally classified four ways: (I) broadly, by tissue, organ, and system; then by (II) specific type, and (III) grade according to WHO classifications; and (IV) finally by spread according to the Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) system.

    • Antonino Carbone
    • 10.3390/cancers12040980
    • 2020
    • Cancers (Basel). 2020 Apr; 12(4): 980.
  5. Mar 31, 2021 · Doctors use cancer stages to describe how severe a cancer is and to guide the treatment. Learn more about staging systems and cancer grading here.

  6. Aug 10, 2022 · Grading cancer assesses the makeup of cancer cells, trying to determine how aggressive the cancer is. Staging is often broken down into two types : Clinical staging examines the cancer using blood tests, physical exams, imaging tests and/or a biopsy.

  7. The grade of a cancer describes what the cancer cells look like using a microscope. Most cancers are graded by how they compare with normal cells. Low grade or grade I tumors are well-differentiated.

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