There are different types of treatment for patients with breast cancer.
Different types of treatment are available for patients with breast cancer. Some treatments are standard (the currently used treatment), and some are being tested in clinical trials. A treatment clinical trial is a research study meant to help improve current treatments or obtain information on new treatments for patients with cancer.
When clinical trials show that a new treatment is better than the
standard treatment, the new treatment may become the standard treatment.
Patients may want to think about taking part in a clinical trial. Some
clinical trials are open only to patients who have not started
treatment.
Six types of standard treatment are used:
Surgery
Most patients with breast cancer have surgery to remove the cancer from the breast. Some of the lymph nodes under the arm are usually taken out and looked at under a microscope to see if they contain cancer cells.
Breast-conserving surgery, an operation to remove the cancer but not the breast itself, includes the following:
- Lumpectomy: Surgery to remove a tumor (lump) and a small amount of normal tissue around it.
- Partial mastectomy: Surgery to remove the part of the breast that has cancer and some normal tissue around it. The lining over the chest muscles below the cancer may also be removed. This procedure is also called a segmental mastectomy.
Breast-conserving
surgery. Dotted lines show the area containing the tumor that is
removed and some of the lymph nodes that may be removed.
Patients who are treated with breast-conserving surgery may also have some of the lymph nodes under the arm removed for biopsy. This procedure is called lymph node dissection. It may be done at the same time as the breast-conserving surgery or after. Lymph node dissection is done through a separate incision.
Other types of surgery include the following:
- Total mastectomy: Surgery to remove the whole breast that has cancer. This procedure is also called a simple mastectomy. Some of the lymph nodes under the arm may be removed for biopsy at the same time as the breast surgery or after. This is done through a separate incision.
- Total (simple) mastectomy. The dotted line shows where the entire breast is removed. Some lymph nodes under the arm may also be removed.
- Modified radical mastectomy:
Surgery to remove the whole breast that has cancer, many of the lymph
nodes under the arm, the lining over the chest muscles, and sometimes,
part of the chest wall muscles.Modified radical mastectomy. The dotted line shows where the entire breast and some lymph nodes are removed. Part of the chest wall muscle may also be removed.
Chemotherapy
may be given before surgery to remove the tumor. When given before
surgery, chemotherapy will shrink the tumor and reduce the amount of
tissue that needs to be removed during surgery. Treatment given before
surgery is called neoadjuvant therapy.
Even if the doctor removes all the cancer that can be seen at the time of the surgery, some patients may be given radiation therapy, chemotherapy, or hormone therapy
after surgery to kill any cancer cells that are left. Treatment given
after the surgery, to lower the risk that the cancer will come back, is
called adjuvant therapy.
If a patient is going to have a mastectomy, breast reconstruction
(surgery to rebuild a breast’s shape after a mastectomy) may be
considered. Breast reconstruction may be done at the time of the
mastectomy or at a future time. The reconstructed breast may be made
with the patient’s own (nonbreast) tissue or by using implants filled with saline or silicone gel.
Before the decision to get an implant is made, patients can call the
Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Center for Devices and Radiologic
Health at 1-888-INFO-FDA (1-888-463-6332) or visit the FDA's Web site for more information on breast implants.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy followed by surgery
Sentinel lymph node biopsy is the removal of the sentinel lymph node during surgery. The sentinel lymph node is the first lymph node to receive lymphatic drainage from a tumor. It is the first lymph node the cancer is likely to spread to from the tumor. A radioactive substance and/or blue dye is injected near the tumor. The substance or dye flows through the lymph ducts to the lymph nodes. The first lymph node to receive the substance or dye is removed. A pathologist views the tissue under a microscope
to look for cancer cells. If cancer cells are not found, it may not be
necessary to remove more lymph nodes. After the sentinel lymph node
biopsy, the surgeon removes the tumor (breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy).
Sentinel
lymph node biopsy of the breast. A radioactive substance and/or blue
dye is injected near the tumor (first panel). The injected material is
detected visually and/or with a probe that detects radioactivity (middle
panel). The sentinel nodes (the first lymph nodes to take up the
material) are removed and checked for cancer cells (last panel).
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy is a cancer treatment that uses high-energy x-rays or other types of radiation to kill cancer cells or keep them from growing. There are two types of radiation therapy. External radiation therapy uses a machine outside the body to send radiation toward the cancer. Internal radiation therapy uses a radioactive substance sealed in needles, seeds, wires, or catheters that are placed directly into or near the cancer. The way the radiation therapy is given depends on the type and stage of the cancer being treated.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a cancer treatment that uses drugs
to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells or by
stopping them from dividing. When chemotherapy is taken by mouth or
injected into a vein or muscle, the drugs enter the bloodstream and can reach cancer cells throughout the body (systemic chemotherapy). When chemotherapy is placed directly into the cerebrospinal fluid, an organ, or a body cavity such as the abdomen, the drugs mainly affect cancer cells in those areas (regional chemotherapy). The way the chemotherapy is given depends on the type and stage of the cancer being treated.
See Drugs Approved for Breast Cancer for more information.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy is a cancer treatment that removes hormones or blocks their action and stops cancer cells from growing. Hormones are substances made by glands
in the body and circulated in the bloodstream. Some hormones can cause
certain cancers to grow. If tests show that the cancer cells have places
where hormones can attach (receptors), drugs, surgery, or radiation therapy is used to reduce the production of hormones or block them from working. The hormone estrogen, which makes some breast cancers grow, is made mainly by the ovaries. Treatment to stop the ovaries from making estrogen is called ovarian ablation.
Hormone therapy with tamoxifen is often given to patients with early stages of breast cancer and those with metastatic
breast cancer (cancer that has spread to other parts of the body).
Hormone therapy with tamoxifen or estrogens can act on cells all over
the body and may increase the chance of developing endometrial cancer. Women taking tamoxifen should have a pelvic exam every year to look for any signs of cancer. Any vaginal bleeding, other than menstrual bleeding, should be reported to a doctor as soon as possible.
Hormone therapy with an aromatase inhibitor is given to some postmenopausal women who have hormone-dependent breast cancer. Hormone-dependent breast cancer needs the hormone estrogen to grow. Aromatase inhibitors decrease the body's estrogen by blocking an enzyme called aromatase from turning androgen into estrogen.
For
the treatment of early stage breast cancer, certain aromatase
inhibitors may be used as adjuvant therapy instead of tamoxifen or after
2 or more years of tamoxifen. For the treatment of metastatic breast cancer, aromatase inhibitors are being tested in clinical trials to compare them to hormone therapy with tamoxifen.
See Drugs Approved for Breast Cancer for more information.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy
is a type of treatment that uses drugs or other substances to identify
and attack specific cancer cells without harming normal cells. Monoclonal antibodies and tyrosine kinase inhibitors are two types of targeted therapies used in the treatment of breast cancer. PARP inhibitors are a type of targeted therapy being studied for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer.
Monoclonal antibody therapy is a cancer treatment that uses antibodies made in the laboratory, from a single type of immune system
cell. These antibodies can identify substances on cancer cells or
normal substances that may help cancer cells grow. The antibodies attach
to the substances and kill the cancer cells, block their growth, or
keep them from spreading. Monoclonal antibodies are given by infusion. They may be used alone or to carry drugs, toxins,
or radioactive material directly to cancer cells. Monoclonal antibodies
may be used in combination with chemotherapy as adjuvant therapy.
Trastuzumab is a monoclonal antibody that blocks the effects of the growth factor protein HER2,
which sends growth signals to breast cancer cells. About one-fourth of
patients with breast cancer have tumors that may be treated with
trastuzumab combined with chemotherapy.
Pertuzumab
is a monoclonal antibody that may be combined with trastuzumab and
chemotherapy to treat breast cancer. It may be used to treat certain
patients with HER2-positive breast cancer that has metastasized
(spread to other parts of the body). It may also be used as neoadjuvant
therapy in certain patients with early-stage HER2-positive breast
cancer.
Ado-trastuzumab emtansine
is a monoclonal antibody linked to an anticancer drug. This is called
an antibody-drug conjugate. It is used to treat HER2-positive breast
cancer that has spread to other parts of the body or recurred (come back).
Tyrosine
kinase inhibitors are targeted therapy drugs that block signals needed
for tumors to grow. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors may be used with other
anticancer drugs as adjuvant therapy.
Lapatinib is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor that blocks the effects of the HER2 protein and other proteins inside tumor cells. It may be used with other drugs to treat patients with HER2-positive breast cancer that has progressed after treatment with trastuzumab.
PARP inhibitors are a type of targeted therapy that block DNA
repair and may cause cancer cells to die. PARP inhibitor therapy is
being studied for the treatment of triple-negative breast cancer.
See Drugs Approved for Breast Cancer for more information.
New types of treatment are being tested in clinical trials.
This
summary section describes treatments that are being studied in clinical
trials. It may not mention every new treatment being studied.
Information about clinical trials is available from the NCI Web site.
High-dose chemotherapy with stem cell transplant
High-dose chemotherapy with stem cell transplant is a way of giving high doses of chemotherapy and replacing blood -forming cells destroyed by the cancer treatment. Stem cells (immature blood cells) are removed from the blood or bone marrow of the patient or a donor
and are frozen and stored. After the chemotherapy is completed, the
stored stem cells are thawed and given back to the patient through an
infusion. These reinfused stem cells grow into (and restore) the body’s
blood cells.
Studies have shown that
high-dose chemotherapy followed by stem cell transplant does not work
better than standard chemotherapy in the treatment of breast cancer.
Doctors have decided that, for now, high-dose chemotherapy should be
tested only in clinical trials. Before taking part in such a trial,
women should talk with their doctors about the serious side effects, including death, that may be caused by high-dose chemotherapy.
Patients may want to think about taking part in a clinical trial.
For some patients, taking part in a clinical trial
may be the best treatment choice. Clinical trials are part of the
cancer research process. Clinical trials are done to find out if new
cancer treatments are safe and effective or better than the standard treatment.
Many
of today's standard treatments for cancer are based on earlier clinical
trials. Patients who take part in a clinical trial may receive the
standard treatment or be among the first to receive a new treatment.
Patients
who take part in clinical trials also help improve the way cancer will
be treated in the future. Even when clinical trials do not lead to
effective new treatments, they often answer important questions and help
move research forward.
Patients can enter clinical trials before, during, or after starting their cancer treatment.
Some
clinical trials only include patients who have not yet received
treatment. Other trials test treatments for patients whose cancer has
not gotten better. There are also clinical trials that test new ways to
stop cancer from recurring (coming back) or reduce the side effects of cancer treatment.
Clinical
trials are taking place in many parts of the country. See the Treatment
Options section that follows for links to current treatment clinical
trials. These have been retrieved from NCI's listing of clinical trials.
Follow-up tests may be needed.
Some of the tests that were done to diagnose the cancer or to find out the stage
of the cancer may be repeated. Some tests will be repeated in order to
see how well the treatment is working. Decisions about whether to
continue, change, or stop treatment may be based on the results of these
tests. This is sometimes called re-staging.
Bv Intergroup Trading operates within the Cosmetic, pharmacy and health industry, representing health and beauty clients offering sales, merchandising and training services.
ReplyDeleteBuy Fragrances Online