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Disponible en español: Qué significa el cáncer metastásico

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What Metastatic Cancer Means

A plain-language explanation of metastatic cancer: how cancer spreads, where it commonly goes, what symptoms may occur, and how it is treated. Based on National Cancer Institute resources.

AI-assisted and source verified. Not reviewed by a healthcare professional unless specifically stated.

Sources last checked: 2026-07-14Last updated: 2026-07-14Next planned review: 2028-07-13

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Cancer Explained uses AI to organize and translate information from the authoritative sources cited on each page. Automated checks review claims, citations, clarity, duplication, and potential safety concerns before publication. Our content is not currently reviewed by physicians unless a specific qualified reviewer is named on the page. Cancer Explained provides general education and should not replace advice from your healthcare team.

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NCI source

National Cancer Institute

The short answer

Metastatic cancer is cancer that has spread from where it started to a distant part of the body. It keeps the name of the original cancer. There are treatments for most types, and the goal is often to control it and ease symptoms.

  • Metastatic cancer is cancer that spreads from where it started to a distant part of the body.

  • For many cancers, it is also called stage 4 cancer.

  • It keeps the name of the original cancer, such as metastatic breast cancer, even after it spreads.

  • The most common places cancer spreads are the bone, liver, and lung.

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The full explanation.

What metastatic cancer is

Cancer that spreads from where it started to a distant part of the body is called metastatic cancer. For many types of cancer, it is also called stage 4 cancer. The process by which cancer cells spread to other parts of the body is called metastasis.

Metastatic cancer keeps the name of the original cancer. For example, breast cancer that spreads to the lung is called metastatic breast cancer, not lung cancer. It is treated as stage 4 breast cancer, not as lung cancer.

When doctors look at the cells under a microscope, metastatic cancer cells look like the cells of the original cancer, not like the cells of the place where they are found. That is how doctors can tell the cancer spread from somewhere else.

Sometimes doctors cannot tell where a metastatic cancer started. This is called cancer of unknown primary origin.

How cancer spreads

Cancer cells spread through the body in a series of steps. These steps include:

  1. growing into, or invading, nearby normal tissue
  2. moving through the walls of nearby lymph nodes or blood vessels
  3. traveling through the lymphatic system and bloodstream to other parts of the body
  4. stopping in small blood vessels at a distant place, then moving into the surrounding tissue
  5. growing in this tissue until a tiny tumor forms
  6. causing new blood vessels to grow, which gives the new tumor a blood supply so it can keep growing

Most of the time, spreading cancer cells die at some point in this process. Only when conditions are right at every step can some of the cells form new tumors. Metastatic cancer cells can also stay inactive at a distant site for many years before they begin to grow again, if they grow at all.

Where cancer spreads

Cancer can spread to almost any part of the body, though different types are more likely to spread to certain areas. The most common sites where cancer spreads are the bone, liver, and lung.

Some examples of common patterns include breast cancer spreading to bone, brain, liver, or lung; colon cancer spreading to the liver, lung, or the lining of the belly; and prostate cancer spreading to the bone, liver, or lung. Your health care team can tell you what is most likely for your type of cancer.

Symptoms to be aware of

Metastatic cancer does not always cause symptoms. When symptoms do occur, what they are like and how often they happen depend on the size and location of the tumors. Some common signs include:

  • pain and fractures, when cancer has spread to the bone
  • headache, seizures, or dizziness, when cancer has spread to the brain
  • shortness of breath, when cancer has spread to the lung
  • yellowing of the skin (jaundice) or swelling in the belly, when cancer has spread to the liver

Tell your health care team about any new or changing symptoms. They can help figure out the cause and how to manage it.

How metastatic cancer is treated

There are treatments for most types of metastatic cancer. Often, the goal of treatment is to control the cancer by stopping or slowing its growth. Some people can live for years with metastatic cancer that is well controlled.

Other treatments may improve quality of life by relieving symptoms. This type of care is called palliative care, and it can be given at any point during treatment for cancer.

The treatment that fits you depends on your type of primary cancer, where it has spread, treatments you have had in the past, and your general health. To learn about your options, including clinical trials, ask your health care team about the treatment information for your specific type of cancer.

If your cancer can no longer be controlled, you and your loved ones may want to discuss end-of-life care. Whatever you choose about treatment, palliative care remains available to control symptoms and side effects.

Words to know

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Common questions

What is metastatic cancer?

Metastatic cancer is cancer that spreads from where it started to a distant part of the body. The process of spreading is called metastasis. For many types of cancer, metastatic cancer is also called stage 4 cancer.

Does the cancer change its name when it spreads?

No. Metastatic cancer has the same name as the primary (original) cancer. For example, breast cancer that spreads to the lung is called metastatic breast cancer, not lung cancer, and it is treated as stage 4 breast cancer.

Where does cancer most often spread?

Cancer can spread to almost any part of the body. The most common sites are the bone, liver, and lung, though different types of cancer are more likely to spread to certain areas than others.

Does metastatic cancer always cause symptoms?

No. Metastatic cancer does not always cause symptoms. When symptoms do occur, they depend on the size and location of the tumors, such as bone pain, headaches, shortness of breath, or swelling in the belly.

Can metastatic cancer be treated?

Yes. There are treatments for most types of metastatic cancer. Often the goal is to control it by stopping or slowing its growth. Some people live for years with well-controlled metastatic cancer. Palliative care can also relieve symptoms at any point.

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  1. Q1.According to this article, what is metastatic cancer?
  2. Q2.If breast cancer spreads to the lung, what is it called?
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How this page was created

Cancer Explained uses AI to organize and translate information from the authoritative sources cited on each page. Automated checks review claims, citations, clarity, duplication, and potential safety concerns before publication. Our content is not currently reviewed by physicians unless a specific qualified reviewer is named on the page. Cancer Explained provides general education and should not replace advice from your healthcare team.

Editorial status: Source verified This page was created with AI assistance and checked against the sources listed on it. Source checking is not a medical review.

Human medical review: not completed. At this time, most Cancer Explained content has not been reviewed by a physician or other healthcare professional. Pages with documented human medical review identify the reviewer, credentials, and review date directly.

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What Metastatic Cancer Means