Chemotherapy is the use of medicines to control, slow, or cure medical conditions. The term chemotherapy is most often used to refer to the medicines given to slow or stop the growth of cancer cells. A problem with these medicines is that some of them also damage healthy cells.
The goals of chemotherapy are:
Chemotherapy uses many drugs. In general they fall into 3 categories:
Most of the chemotherapy drugs are antimitotics. This means that they stop cancer cell growth by stopping cells from dividing into more cells. There are many ways that scientists have found to do this, so there are now many different kinds of these drugs. They include names you may have heard: Adriamycin (doxorubicin), Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide), and 5FU (5-fluorouracil.
Hormone therapy plays a very important role in chemotherapy. Sex hormone inhibitors are used to treat tumors that grow better with the hormones estrogen and testosterone. (These are hormones that naturally occur in the body.) The inhibitors stop the hormones from helping the tumor grow. Two commonly used hormone inhibitors are tamoxifen, which blocks female hormones in breast cancer, and finasteride, which blocks testosterone in men with prostate cancer. Hormones, such as cortisone (Prednisone), are also used to treat some tumors.
Biological therapy, or immunotherapy, is the name for a new, growing group of cancer drugs. They are medicines that help the immune system work better and fight the cancer. Interferon is an example of one of these drugs. Another example of biologic therapy is the use of antibodies. The goal is to identify or create antibodies that can bind to cancer cells. The antibodies can keep the cancer cells from multiplying, or they may destroy them. This type of therapy is also called biotherapy or biological response modifier therapy (BRM).
Chemotherapy is used in several ways:
The treatment depends on what type of tumor you have, where the tumor is, and how much it has spread. It can be given on many different schedules: daily, weekly, or monthly. The schedules are based on what research has found to work best for each type of cancer. The medicine can be given by mouth, by shot, or into a tube put in a vein (IV, or intravenous). If given by shot, it can be injected into a muscle or it may be given into the spinal cord area.
IV medicine may be given over a few minutes or a few hours. You may be able to give some treatments to yourself at home. Portable pumps are available for chemotherapy treatments that go into the vein. The pump makes sure the prescribed dose of medicine is given over the correct period of time. You may receive some medicines at your healthcare provider's office and then go home wearing a pump at your waist (like a fanny pack) for a prescribed number of hours.
Common side effects of the antimitotics are fatigue, nausea, and hair loss. Other side effects depend on the drug, the dose, and your health. Examples of other possible side effects of these drugs are:
An otherwise healthy person receiving chemotherapy may tolerate it very well. Someone who has several other serious medical problems in addition to cancer may have a more difficult time with side effects.
Common side effects from hormone inhibitors are symptoms of menopause for women taking the estrogen-blocking tamoxifen and lowered sex drive for men taking testosterone-blocking finasteride.
The biologic therapies (immunotherapies) often cause people to have flulike symptoms: fever, aches, chills, nausea, and loss of appetite.
Your healthcare provider will be watching closely for any side effects and help you manage them. If the side effects become severe, the dose of the drug may be lowered or the treatment may be postponed. Sometimes hospitalization is required for severe side effects. In extreme cases, treatment might be stopped.
Ask your healthcare provider about clinical trials. These are studies being done to test new treatments, new medicines, and new combinations of medicines. Research programs sometimes allow you to receive the latest treatments. Ask your provider where the closest clinical trials are (often at universities and participating doctors' offices) and how you can learn more about them. Making an appointment to learn about a clinical trial does not mean you have to take part in the trial. The options, the risks, the costs, and whether your insurance will pay will be explained to you. Then you can decide if you want to join the study.
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