title: Oncologist
slug: oncologist
aliases:
  - Cancer Doctor
  - Medical Oncologist
  - Cancer Specialist
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - oncology
  - cancer
  - chemotherapy
  - medicine
  - goals-of-care
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Stages cancer, matches the patient to the line of therapy whose benefit
  justifies its toxicity, and keeps the goals of care — cure, control, or
  comfort — honest and shared as the disease evolves.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: prerequisite
    note: oncology is a subspecialty built on internal medicine training
  - slug: pathologist
    type: collaboration
    note: defines the diagnosis and molecular profile that selects therapy
  - slug: surgeon
    type: collaboration
    note: resects the curable tumor as half the multidisciplinary plan
  - slug: radiologist
    type: adjacent
    note: stages disease and measures treatment response
  - slug: pharmacist
    type: collaboration
    note: guards dosing and interactions of toxic regimens
specializations:
  - Hematologist-Oncologist
  - Radiation Oncologist
  - Surgical Oncologist
  - Pediatric Oncologist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: 'Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology (DeVita)'
    kind: book
  - title: NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology
    kind: standard
  - title: The Emperor of All Maladies
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      An oncologist exists to fight cancer in a body that cannot fight it alone,
      and to

      know precisely how hard to fight given what the fight will cost the person
      living

      in that body. Cancer is the disease where the treatment is itself a
      poison, where

      the same drug that shrinks a tumor can kill the patient, and where "cure,"

      "control," and "comfort" are three different goals that demand three
      different

      plans. The oncologist's reason for being is to stage the disease
      accurately,

      choose the line of therapy whose benefit exceeds its toxicity for this
      person,

      and to hold honestly, again and again, the conversation about what the
      treatment

      can and cannot do — so the patient spends their time, and their remaining
      time,

      on what they value.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Establish the diagnosis and stage, match the patient to the therapy whose

      expected benefit justifies its toxicity, sequence the lines of treatment
      as the

      disease evolves, and keep the goals of care — cure, control, or comfort —
      honest

      and shared at every step.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is prescribing chemotherapy; the actual work is
      risk-benefit

      arithmetic over time and the honest conversation that frames it. An
      oncologist

      confirms the tissue diagnosis and molecular profile, stages the cancer,
      and

      defines the intent — curative or palliative — before choosing a regimen.
      They

      select and sequence systemic therapy (cytotoxic chemotherapy, targeted
      agents,

      immunotherapy, hormonal therapy), manage its toxicity, and decide when a
      line has

      failed and the next begins. They coordinate the multidisciplinary plan
      with

      surgeons and radiation oncologists, monitor response with imaging and
      markers,

      and recognize the inflection point where more treatment harms more than it
      helps.

      Underneath it all is the management of hope and truth simultaneously:
      telling

      people the real prognosis without taking away the reason to get up
      tomorrow.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Stage before you treat.** The stage defines the intent, and the intent
        defines everything. A curable early cancer and an incurable metastatic one with
        the same histology are different diseases requiring opposite tolerances for
        toxicity.
      - **Intent first: cure, control, or comfort.** Name the goal explicitly.
      Curative
        intent justifies harsh toxicity; palliative intent does not buy weeks at the
        cost of the quality of the time you have.
      - **The benefit must beat the harm for this patient.** A regimen with a
      3-month
        median survival gain that costs a frail patient three months of misery is a bad
        trade, however good the trial looked.
      - **Treat the molecular target, not just the organ.** Modern oncology is
      defined
        by biomarkers — EGFR, ALK, HER2, PD-L1, BRCA, MSI — that turn "lung cancer"
        into a dozen different diseases with different drugs.
      - **Lines of therapy are a finite resource; sequence them deliberately.**
      Each
        line buys time and burns an option; plan the sequence, don't improvise it.
      - **The goals-of-care conversation is treatment.** Discussing what the
      patient
        values when cure is off the table is not giving up; it is the most consequential
        intervention you offer.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **TNM staging and stage migration.** Tumor size, Node involvement, and
        Metastasis define the stage; the stage predicts survival and dictates intent.
        Better imaging finds smaller mets and shifts patients between stages (the Will
        Rogers phenomenon), which distorts naive survival comparisons.
      - **Lines of therapy.** First-line, second-line, and beyond — each chosen
      on
        evidence, each with diminishing expected benefit. Thinking in lines forces the
        question: what's the goal of *this* line, and what comes after it?
      - **The risk-benefit / toxicity ledger.** Every regimen has a response
      rate, a
        survival benefit, and a toxicity profile graded by CTCAE. The decision is
        whether the expected benefit (often a median, which half the patients won't
        reach) justifies the expected harm for this specific person and performance
        status.
      - **Performance status as the gatekeeper.** ECOG/Karnofsky scores predict
        tolerance better than age; a patient who spends most of the day in bed (ECOG 3)
        rarely benefits from cytotoxic therapy and often is harmed by it.
      - **The hallmarks of cancer.** Sustained proliferation, evasion of growth
        suppressors, resistance to death, angiogenesis, invasion, immune evasion — the
        biology that explains why targeted drugs work and why resistance always comes.
      - **Number needed to treat vs. number needed to harm, adjuvant edition.**
      In
        adjuvant therapy you treat many disease-free patients to prevent recurrence in
        a few; most get only the toxicity. The absolute benefit, not the relative,
        decides.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - Cancer is the patient's own cells, which is why every effective
      treatment also
        harms normal tissue.
      - The stage and intent, set at the start, govern every decision that
      follows.

      - A median survival benefit is a statement about a population; the
      individual in
        front of you lands somewhere on the curve, and you don't know where.
      - Resistance is not a failure of the drug but the expected evolution of
      the
        tumor; plan for the next line from the first.
      - Time is the patient's, not the disease's; quality of remaining time is a
        legitimate and often dominant goal.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - What is the histology, the stage, and the molecular profile — do I have
      enough
        tissue to be sure?
      - Is the intent curative or palliative, and have I said so out loud to the
        patient?
      - Does the expected benefit of this regimen justify its toxicity for
      *this*
        performance status?
      - What is this patient's goal — to live longer, to feel better, or both —
      and
        which does this treatment serve?
      - Has this line failed, and what is the next line, or is the next step
      best
        supportive care?
      - Is this new symptom the cancer, the treatment, or a separate problem?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Curative vs. palliative intent.** Localized disease aims for cure and
      tolerates
        aggressive multimodality therapy; metastatic disease (with rare exceptions)
        aims to control and palliate, which changes the acceptable toxicity entirely.
      - **Adjuvant therapy threshold.** After curative surgery, add systemic
      therapy
        when the absolute reduction in recurrence risk justifies treating many patients
        who are already cured; tools like Oncotype DX and Adjuvant! quantify the gain.
      - **Choosing and sequencing lines.** Match first-line to the biomarker and
      the
        evidence; reserve agents for later lines deliberately; reassess response and
        toxicity at every restaging.
      - **When to stop.** Declining performance status, progression through
      multiple
        lines, and patient goals signal the shift to best supportive care and hospice —
        a decision, not a default, made before a crisis forces it.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Confirm and profile.** Establish histology, ensure adequate tissue,
      order
         molecular and immunohistochemical markers; involve the pathologist.
      2. **Stage.** Imaging, sometimes PET, sometimes surgical staging; define
      TNM and
         the stage group.
      3. **Set intent and goals.** Decide curative vs. palliative; hold the
         goals-of-care conversation; document what the patient values.
      4. **Plan multidisciplinarily.** Bring the case to tumor board; coordinate
         surgery, radiation, and systemic therapy in the right sequence.
      5. **Treat and support.** Choose the regimen; manage toxicity proactively
         (antiemetics, growth factors, dose modification); support the patient through
         it.
      6. **Reassess.** Restage on schedule; measure response (RECIST), weigh
      continuing,
         switching lines, or stopping.
      7. **Transition.** When treatment no longer serves the goal, pivot to
      symptom
         control, palliative care, and hospice without abandoning the patient.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Survival gain vs. quality of life.** A few months of median survival
      can cost
        the patient most of those months in toxicity; the trade is the patient's to
        weigh, informed honestly.
      - **Aggressive multimodality vs. tolerability.** Adding chemo to radiation
      to
        surgery improves cure rates and stacks toxicity; the frail patient may not
        survive the cure.
      - **Dose intensity vs. dose reduction.** Full-dose therapy maximizes tumor
      kill
        and toxicity; reducing dose protects the patient but may undertreat the cancer.
      - **Early hospice referral vs. continued treatment.** Earlier palliative
      care
        often improves both quality and length of life, but feels to patients like
        giving up.
      - **Treating the asymptomatic recurrence vs. watching.** Earlier treatment
      of
        indolent disease may add toxicity without adding survival; sometimes watchful
        waiting is the evidence-based choice.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - No treatment decision before the stage and the intent are clear.

      - If the performance status is poor, the toxicity will dominate the
      benefit —
        reconsider cytotoxic therapy.
      - A median is not a promise; tell the patient about the spread, not just
      the
        midpoint.
      - A new neurologic symptom in a cancer patient is a brain met or cord
      compression
        until imaging says otherwise — image now.
      - Febrile neutropenia is an emergency; antibiotics within the hour, not
      after the
        workup.
      - The patient who asks "how long" deserves a range and an honest "I don't
      know
        exactly," not false precision or false hope.
      - Plan the next line before the current one fails, so progression doesn't
      catch
        you improvising.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Treating the cancer and ignoring the patient.** Pursuing tumor
      response while
        the patient's quality of life collapses.
      - **Overtreatment at the end of life.** Starting a new line of
      chemotherapy in the
        last weeks because stopping feels like failure.
      - **Inadequate tissue / skipped molecular profiling.** Choosing therapy
      blind to
        the biomarker that would have changed it.
      - **False hope or false despair.** Quoting only the best outcomes, or only
      the
        worst, instead of the honest distribution.
      - **Missing the oncologic emergency.** Overlooking cord compression, SVC
        syndrome, tumor lysis, hypercalcemia, or neutropenic sepsis.
      - **Avoiding the conversation.** Letting the patient discover the
      prognosis from a
        crisis because the hard talk kept getting deferred.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **The reflexive next line** — treating progression with another regimen
      without
        asking whether the goal still justifies it.
      - **Chemotherapy in the last weeks** — toxicity that buys nothing but a
      worse
        death.
      - **One-size staging** — treating "breast cancer" without the receptor and
      genomic
        profile that defines its biology.
      - **Hope management by omission** — protecting the patient from the
      prognosis and
        thereby denying them the chance to plan.
      - **Soloing the plan** — bypassing the tumor board and the
      multidisciplinary
        sequence.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **TNM / stage** — tumor, node, metastasis; the anatomic extent that sets
        prognosis and intent.
      - **Adjuvant / neoadjuvant** — systemic therapy after / before the primary
      local
        treatment.
      - **Curative vs. palliative intent** — treating to cure vs. to control
      symptoms
        and prolong life.
      - **Line of therapy** — a sequential regimen, numbered as prior ones fail.

      - **Performance status (ECOG/Karnofsky)** — a graded measure of how well
      the
        patient functions; a key predictor of tolerance.
      - **RECIST** — the criteria for measuring tumor response on imaging.

      - **CTCAE** — the standardized grading of treatment toxicity.

      - **Targeted therapy / immunotherapy** — drugs against a molecular driver
      / drugs
        that unleash the immune system.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **Pathology and molecular profiling** — the biopsy,
      immunohistochemistry, and
        next-generation sequencing that define the disease.
      - **Staging imaging (CT, MRI, PET)** — to map extent and measure response.

      - **Tumor markers** — CEA, CA-125, PSA, and others, to track trends, not
      to
        diagnose.
      - **The systemic therapy armamentarium** — cytotoxics, targeted agents,
        immunotherapy, endocrine therapy.
      - **Validated prognostic and decision tools** — Oncotype DX, Adjuvant!,
      nomograms.

      - **Supportive care** — antiemetics, growth factors, palliative-care
      partnership,
        the means to make treatment survivable.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Oncology is multidisciplinary by necessity; no one cures cancer alone. The
      tumor

      board is the engine — the medical oncologist, surgeon, radiation
      oncologist,

      radiologist, and pathologist decide the sequence together, because
      operating

      before chemotherapy or radiating before staging can foreclose a cure. The

      pathologist defines the diagnosis behind the diagnosis, including the
      molecular

      profile that selects the drug. The palliative-care team is a partner from

      diagnosis, not a last resort. Oncology nurses administer the toxic
      regimens and

      catch the febrile neutropenia at 2 a.m. The recurring friction is the
      handoff at

      the goals-of-care inflection point; the discipline is to communicate the
      intent

      and prognosis explicitly so the whole team rows the same direction.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Oncology lives at the boundary of hope and harm, and that is where its
      ethics

      concentrate. Informed consent must be genuine: the patient understands
      that a

      "response" is not a cure, that a median is not a promise, and that the
      toxicity is

      real. Truth-telling is a duty even when the truth is a short prognosis,
      because a

      patient who doesn't know they are dying cannot choose how to spend the
      time.

      Financial toxicity is real harm — drugs that cost a fortune for marginal
      benefit —

      and the honest oncologist names it. The pressure to keep treating, from
      the

      patient, the family, and the oncologist's own discomfort with stopping,
      must be

      resisted when treatment no longer serves the patient's goals. And no
      financial

      incentive — the margin on infused chemotherapy — may shape the
      recommendation.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The frail 78-year-old with metastatic pancreatic cancer.** The reflex is
      to

      offer combination chemotherapy because it exists. The expert checks
      performance

      status: ECOG 3, mostly bedbound, weight falling. The trial that showed a
      survival

      benefit enrolled fitter patients (ECOG 0-1); in this patient the regimen's

      toxicity will dominate any benefit. The goals-of-care conversation reveals
      she

      wants to be home and comfortable for a granddaughter's wedding in two
      months. The

      decision is single-agent gentle therapy or best supportive care with early

      palliative involvement. Declining the aggressive regimen is the skilled
      act.


      **The biomarker that changes everything.** A 60-year-old never-smoker with

      metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. The reflex is to start platinum-doublet

      chemotherapy. The expert insists on adequate tissue and molecular
      profiling

      first, even if it delays treatment a week. NGS returns an EGFR exon-19
      deletion.

      The decision flips: a targeted oral inhibitor with a far higher response
      rate, far

      less toxicity, and longer progression-free survival than chemotherapy.
      Treating

      the organ instead of the molecular driver would have given a worse drug
      for a

      worse outcome.


      **Progression on third-line therapy.** A patient with metastatic
      colorectal

      cancer progresses after three lines, performance status now declining,
      asking for

      "whatever's next." The expert does not reflexively reach for a fourth
      line. The

      honest conversation: the expected benefit of further chemotherapy is now
      very

      small and the toxicity high, and the patient's stated goal is time at home
      with

      function. The decision, made together, is to stop active treatment and
      transition

      to hospice, with the oncologist staying involved for symptom control.
      Knowing

      when to stop is as much oncology as knowing what to start.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      An oncologist is a physician who specialized in cancer, so internal
      medicine and

      the diagnostic discipline of the physician are the foundation. The
      pathologist

      defines the diagnosis and the molecular profile that selects therapy,
      making them

      an indispensable partner. The surgeon resects the curable tumor and is
      half of

      the multidisciplinary plan. The radiologist stages the disease and
      measures

      response. The pharmacist guards the dosing and interactions of toxic
      regimens.

      The palliative-care side of medicine partners from diagnosis through the

      end-of-life transition.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *DeVita, Hellman, and Rosenberg's Cancer: Principles and Practice of
      Oncology*

      - *The Emperor of All Maladies* — Siddhartha Mukherjee

      - NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology

      - *Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine* (oncology section)

      - *Being Mortal* — Atul Gawande
