Stage III colorectal cancer represents a crucial turning point in cancer care, where the disease has moved beyond the bowel wall to involve nearby lymph nodes, yet remains within reach of potentially curative treatment.
Understanding Stage III Colorectal Cancer
When doctors identify stage III colorectal cancer, they are describing a situation where cancer cells have spread beyond the inner layers of the colon or rectum into nearby lymph nodes. However, the cancer has not yet traveled to distant parts of the body like the liver or lungs. This distinction is important because it means the cancer is still considered regionally confined, which influences treatment choices and the chances of successful outcomes.[1]
Stage III is divided into three subcategories—IIIA, IIIB, and IIIC—based on how deeply the cancer has grown through the bowel wall and how many lymph nodes contain cancer cells. These classifications help doctors determine the most appropriate treatment approach for each person. The more lymph nodes involved and the deeper the cancer has penetrated, the more advanced the stage within this category.[2]
Despite the spread to lymph nodes, stage III colorectal cancer is often curable. With complete surgical removal of the cancer combined with additional treatments, many patients can be cured of their disease. According to research, depending on the specific features of the cancer, between 40 and 50 percent of patients with stage III disease are cured with surgery alone. When chemotherapy is added after surgery, outcomes improve further.[6]
Stage IIIA Characteristics
In stage IIIA, the cancer may have spread through the innermost layer of the colon wall (called the mucosa) to the next layer (the submucosa) or to the muscle layer. At this stage, the cancer has also reached one to three nearby lymph nodes—small bean-shaped structures that are part of the immune system—or into tissue near the lymph nodes. Alternatively, stage IIIA can describe cancer still in the inner layer that has spread to four to six nearby lymph nodes.[1]
Stage IIIB Characteristics
Stage IIIB represents more extensive disease. The cancer may have grown through the muscle layer to the outermost layer of the colon wall (the serosa) or through the outermost layer to the tissue that wraps around the colon. It has spread to one to three nearby lymph nodes or to areas of fat close to the lymph nodes. This stage also includes cancer in the muscle or outer lining with four to six lymph nodes involved, or cancer still in the inner or muscle layer that has spread to seven or more lymph nodes.[2]
Stage IIIC Characteristics
Stage IIIC is the most advanced within stage III. This includes cancer that has grown through the outer lining into the tissue layer covering organs in the abdomen with four to six lymph nodes containing cancer, cancer in the outer lining with seven or more lymph nodes involved, or cancer that has grown through the bowel wall into other nearby organs with at least one lymph node or areas of fat close to lymph nodes containing cancer.[2]
How Common is Stage III Colorectal Cancer
Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer diagnosed in people in the United States. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, males are slightly more likely to develop colon cancer than females. The disease affects more people who are Black than members of other ethnic groups or races.[4]
Colorectal cancer typically affects people age 50 and older. However, over the past 15 years, the number of people between ages 20 and 49 with colon cancer has increased by about 1.5 percent each year. Medical researchers are not entirely sure why younger adults are developing this cancer at increasing rates.[4]
When colorectal cancer is discovered, it can be at any stage depending on when screening occurs and whether symptoms prompted medical attention. Stage III represents a significant portion of colorectal cancer diagnoses, as many cancers have already spread to lymph nodes by the time they are found. The exact proportion varies based on screening practices and population characteristics.[11]
Causes and Development
Colorectal cancer develops when cells in the colon or rectum undergo certain changes that affect how they function, especially how they grow and divide into new cells. The disease typically begins in the innermost lining of the colon, which consists of cells that make and release mucus and other fluids. When these cells mutate or change, they may create a colon polyp—a growth on the inner lining of the colon.[4]
Over time, some colon polyps can become cancerous. This transformation usually takes about 10 years, which is why regular screening is so important for prevention. Once cancer forms, it works its way through the layers of tissue and muscle in the colon wall. The cancer may also spread to other parts of the body through the lymph nodes or blood vessels. By the time cancer reaches stage III, it has penetrated through various layers of the colon wall and reached the lymphatic system.[4]
Risk Factors
Colorectal cancer is caused by certain changes to the way colorectal cells function. While there are many risk factors for colorectal cancer, most do not directly cause cancer. Instead, they increase the chance of DNA damage in cells that may lead to colorectal cancer. Some risk factors can be changed through lifestyle modifications, while others, like genetics and age, cannot.[12]
Family history plays a significant role in colorectal cancer risk. Having a first-degree relative—such as a parent, sibling, or child—with a history of colon or rectal cancer increases risk. Similarly, having a personal history of colon, rectal, or ovarian cancer raises the likelihood of developing colorectal cancer.[12]
A personal history of high-risk adenomas also increases risk. These are colorectal polyps that are one centimeter or larger in size or that have cells that look abnormal under a microscope. People with inherited changes in certain genes that increase the risk of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) or Lynch syndrome (hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer) face substantially elevated risk.[12]
Chronic inflammatory conditions of the bowel increase risk as well. Having a personal history of chronic ulcerative colitis or Crohn disease for eight years or more is associated with higher colorectal cancer risk. These conditions cause ongoing inflammation in the digestive tract, which over time can lead to cellular changes that may become cancerous.[12]
Lifestyle factors also contribute to risk. Consuming three or more alcoholic drinks per day and smoking cigarettes both increase the likelihood of developing colorectal cancer. Having obesity is another modifiable risk factor. Older age is a main risk factor for most cancers, as the chance of getting cancer increases as people get older.[12]
Symptoms
It is possible to have colorectal cancer without experiencing any symptoms, which is why screening is so important. When symptoms do occur, they may not immediately suggest cancer, as they can be similar to symptoms of less serious conditions. This can make it challenging to recognize colorectal cancer early without medical testing.[4]
One of the most noticeable symptoms is blood on or in the stool. People may notice blood in the toilet after having a bowel movement, blood on toilet paper after wiping, or stool that looks dark or bright red. While blood in stool does not always mean cancer—it can result from hemorrhoids, anal tears, or even certain foods like beets—it should always be evaluated by a healthcare provider.[4]
Persistent changes in bowel habits are another common symptom. This includes ongoing constipation, diarrhea, or feeling as if you still need to have a bowel movement even after going to the bathroom. These changes differ from occasional digestive upset and persist over time.[4]
Abdominal pain without a known cause that does not go away or is particularly severe should be evaluated. While many things can cause belly pain, unusual or frequent abdominal pain warrants medical attention. Similarly, a bloated stomach that lasts for more than a week or gets worse should be checked by a healthcare provider.[4]
Prevention
While not all cases of colorectal cancer can be prevented, several strategies can significantly reduce risk. Regular screening is one of the most effective prevention methods because it can detect precancerous polyps before they become cancerous. Healthcare providers have screening tests that can find and remove these polyps before they have a chance to develop into cancer.[4]
Lifestyle modifications can lower colorectal cancer risk. Limiting alcohol consumption to fewer than three drinks per day reduces risk. Avoiding tobacco use, including cigarettes, is another important preventive measure. Maintaining a healthy weight through proper diet and regular physical activity also helps reduce risk.[12]
For people with inflammatory bowel diseases like ulcerative colitis or Crohn disease, working closely with healthcare providers to manage these conditions may help reduce cancer risk. Those with known genetic syndromes that increase colorectal cancer risk may benefit from more frequent screening or preventive measures recommended by specialists.[12]
Pathophysiology: How Stage III Affects the Body
The colon wall is made of several distinct layers. From innermost to outermost, these include the mucosa (the innermost lining), the submucosa (a layer of tissue beneath the mucosa), the muscle layer, and the serosa (the outermost layer). Colon cancer starts in the mucosa, which consists of cells that make and release mucus and other fluids to help digest food and move waste through the intestines.[4]
In stage III colorectal cancer, the cancer cells have grown through one or more of these layers and reached the lymphatic system. Lymph nodes are small, bean-shaped structures scattered throughout the body that are part of the immune system. They filter lymph fluid and help fight infections. When cancer cells break away from the primary tumor in the colon, they can travel through lymphatic vessels to nearby lymph nodes.[1]
Once cancer cells reach lymph nodes, they can continue to grow and form new tumors in those nodes. The number of lymph nodes involved and the depth of cancer penetration through the colon wall determine the specific substage (IIIA, IIIB, or IIIC). The presence of cancer in lymph nodes indicates a more advanced disease that requires more intensive treatment than earlier stages.[2]
Although stage III colorectal cancer has spread to lymph nodes, it has not yet reached distant organs like the liver or lungs. This regional spread pattern is why stage III is considered more serious than stages I and II but more treatable than stage IV, where cancer has spread to distant parts of the body. The biological behavior of stage III cancer—having spread beyond the primary site but remaining regionally confined—shapes treatment approaches and influences outcomes.[1]





