When a partner receives a colorectal cancer diagnosis, the person beside them often becomes a caregiver without a clear job description. You might handle appointments, track side effects, manage medications, and keep life running smoothly all at once. This guide covers what to expect from chemotherapy and managing its effects at home, building a working relationship with the oncology team, and organizing the practical details to make daily care work.
What Colorectal Cancer Chemotherapy Involves
The most common chemotherapy regimens for colorectal cancer are FOLFOX (oxaliplatin, leucovorin, and 5-fluorouracil) and FOLFIRI (irinotecan, leucovorin, and 5-fluorouracil). Capecitabine is an oral drug sometimes used with oxaliplatin in combinations called CAPOX or XELOX. The oncologist chooses a regimen based on cancer stage, your partner’s health, and the treatment goal – whether it’s given before surgery, after surgery, or as ongoing therapy for advanced disease. The American Cancer Society lists useful questions to ask when your care team presents a treatment plan.
Your partner receives intravenous FOLFOX and FOLFIRI treatments every two weeks. Each cycle has three parts: a clinic infusion visit, a 46-to-48-hour pump period at home, and a nurse appointment to remove the pump about two days after the clinic visit. Capecitabine, an oral drug, follows a two-weeks-on, one-week-off schedule at home. Knowing this routine helps you plan work, arrange household help, and schedule rest time ahead of time instead of scrambling.
Managing Side Effects at Home
Side effects vary by regimen, but some are common across colorectal cancer chemotherapy. A study of managing symptoms at home found that nausea, diarrhea, fatigue, and pain are the most common problems caregivers report. Knowing what to expect and which symptoms to report helps more than trying to handle everything on your own.
Nausea and Appetite Changes
The care team typically prescribes anti-nausea medication to take before and after infusion sessions. Keep a written log of when your partner takes these medications and how well they work. Small, frequent bland meals that are easy to digest go down better than large portions. If your partner’s appetite stays very low for more than a day or two after an infusion, tell the care team at the next appointment. A registered dietitian who specializes in oncology can create a nutrition plan that fits your partner’s specific regimen and food issues.
Diarrhea
Diarrhea is the main side effect that limits 5-fluorouracil doses. A Canadian Working Group consensus statement on chemotherapy-induced diarrhea in colorectal cancer says to call the care team if any of these happen: your partner has more than four stools above normal in 24 hours, blood appears in the stool, or signs of dehydration develop like dark urine, dizziness, or dry mouth. At home, keep oral rehydration fluids ready, avoid high-fat and high-fiber foods during episodes, and check any loperamide dose with the pharmacist. Never change the loperamide dose on your own. The right amount depends on stool frequency and which chemotherapy drug your partner is taking.
If you’re interested in gut recovery after treatment, the article on colorectal cancer survivorship and microbiome recovery covers what research shows about probiotics.
Fatigue
Cancer-related fatigue is one of the most common side effects and also one of the hardest to fix. Caregivers help by cutting back on unnecessary demands, protecting rest time, and noting which days in each cycle are most tiring. Infusion days and the next day or two are usually the hardest. Lighter schedules and extra household help during those times let your partner recover better and give you a break too.
Cold Sensitivity and Peripheral Neuropathy
Oxaliplatin, which is part of the FOLFOX regimen, commonly causes cold sensitivity in the hands, feet, and throat. Keep gloves near the refrigerator and warm beverages before serving. Some people develop longer-term peripheral neuropathy – numbness or tingling in the hands and feet – from taking oxaliplatin repeatedly. Report any worsening numbness between cycles to the oncologist right away, as dose changes may help.
Hand-Foot Syndrome
Capecitabine-based regimens cause hand-foot syndrome, which shows up as redness, tenderness, and peeling on the palms and soles. The care team may suggest a specific moisturizing cream to apply twice daily – confirm the product and how often to use it before you buy it. When a flare happens, avoid tight shoes, direct pressure on the soles, and hot water on your hands or feet.
Infection Risk During Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy can lower white blood cell counts, which raises infection risk. Ask the care team when your partner’s counts will drop lowest during each cycle – this period is called the nadir. During the nadir, limit contact with people who have infections, wash your hands often, and follow any food safety rules the team gives you. Also ask what fever temperature means you should call right away or go to the emergency room, since the answer depends on your partner’s treatment plan and health history.
Communicating with the Oncology Team
Working well with the oncology team helps improve day-to-day care. Mayo Clinic guidance for cancer caregivers suggests three things: prepare questions before each visit, tell the team what you’ve noticed about how your partner has been, and keep your own health concerns out of your partner’s clinic time.
Preparing for Appointments
Number your questions before each visit so you ask the most important one first. That way, if time gets short, you get the answer you most need. Bring a notebook or use your phone to write down what the team says – drug names, doses, and care instructions are hard to remember when you’re stressed. Ask for a printed or digital copy of any changes to the treatment plan.
Some important questions to ask early: Which side effects need a call or emergency visit, and which ones can you manage at home? How do you reach the team for urgent concerns outside office hours? Who answers medication questions – the oncologist, nurse navigator, or pharmacist?
For a list of questions to ask at any oncology appointment, see the article on questions to ask your oncology team and integrative care planning.
Tracking Symptoms Between Visits
Keep a simple daily log with nausea severity (0-10), stool frequency, energy level, and any new symptoms. This gives the care team concrete information to work with. Many cancer centers let caregivers get access to the patient portal – ask about this at your first appointment. Research shows that caregivers often spot symptom changes before the patient does, which is useful information for the care team.
Understanding the Care Team Structure
Oncology teams usually have a medical oncologist, oncology nurses, a nurse navigator or care coordinator, a social worker, and a pharmacist. Some centers also have a registered dietitian and palliative care consultant. Knowing who does what saves time. Ask questions about medication side effects to the pharmacist or nurse. Talk to the social worker or navigator for emotional and logistical support. The oncologist makes decisions about dose changes. At your first visit, ask someone to clarify the team structure and write down contact information for each person.
Home Care Logistics
Organizing your home routines can reduce the stress of managing treatment and free up your mental energy for bigger decisions.
Scheduling and Transportation
Write out your full treatment calendar as soon as possible. Each two-week cycle of FOLFOX or FOLFIRI includes three appointments: a clinic infusion visit, a 46-to-48-hour pump period at home, and a pump removal appointment. Put all three on your calendar. If getting to appointments is hard, ask the social worker or navigator about volunteer drivers or transportation through the cancer center. These programs can have wait lists, so start asking early.
Medication Organization
Write down each medicine’s name, dose, time, and why your partner takes it. Keep a printed copy at home in a visible spot and a copy on your phone for emergencies. Show the full list to the care team at each visit, including any supplements or over-the-counter products. Use a weekly pill organizer for oral medications and set phone alarms for doses that need to be taken at specific times or with food. If your partner gets a portable infusion pump, follow the team’s training exactly. Don’t change the pump settings unless the team tells you to.
Nutrition and Hydration at Home
Good protein and calorie intake during chemotherapy helps your partner recover between cycles. Stock easy-to-eat foods – plain crackers, rice, broth, and bananas usually work when appetite is low. Serve small portions often instead of full meals. Make sure your partner drinks plenty of fluids throughout the day. If your partner’s weight drops steadily or they can’t keep fluids down for more than 24 hours, call the care team. They can often arrange nutritional support directly without a separate referral.
Supporting Yourself as a Caregiver
Caregiver burnout is common, and it doesn’t mean you’re not doing enough. Studies show caregivers supporting someone through colorectal cancer chemotherapy often deal with anxiety and depression, especially partners who carry most of the load. Accept help from friends, family, or community services – for meals, errands, or just time away from home. This keeps your strength up so you can provide steady care throughout treatment. Ask the care coordinator about social workers and caregiver support groups at the cancer center. If your own sleep, eating, or daily life is disrupted regularly, see your own doctor.
If your partner wants to try supplements for comfort during treatment, show the complete list to the oncologist before starting. Supplements can interact with chemotherapy drugs like 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin, so the care team needs to know what your partner is taking. If you want to research supplement options, you can browse Oncostore’s Integrative Oncology products, which have dosing information to help guide these conversations with the oncology team.
If your partner takes prescription medicine, or if either of you is pregnant or breastfeeding, talk to a doctor before trying any new supplement or protocol. This article gives general information and is not medical advice. Always ask your oncologist or care team about your specific situation.





