Breast Cancer
Treatment
- Conventional Treatment Methods
By: Melissa Buhmeyer
Your team of doctors will make treatment recommendations based on
the stage of your cancer. Your standard treatment options may
include surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and hormone therapy. If
you have been diagnosed with DCIS or LCIS, your stage is the lowest
and the road you will travel will be easier. For DCIS, your options
may include breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy with or without
radiation and hormone therapy. LCIS treatments options are a bit
different. They include observation to determine changes, hormone
therapy to prevent cancer from developing, or bilateral prophylactic
(preventive) mastectomies. Things get more complicated when your
cancer spreads beyond the ducts or lobes/lobules. Once your cancer
has been staged, you can visit www.cancer.gov
to determine your treatment options. They will typically include:
surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, and/or hormone therapy. For IBC,
treatment options are similar to the other types of breast cancer,
but they will always include chemotherapy because of its
aggressiveness.
• Surgery: Breast surgery can be either a lumpectomy,
where the tumor is removed, or a partial or modified radical
mastectomy. With a lumpectomy, it is typically followed by
radiation. This way, you get to keep your breast and studies have
shown no difference in survival rates between lumpectomy/radiation
and mastectomy. Note: Not too long ago, they used to perform radical
mastectomies where the breast, all the lymph nodes, and the
underlying muscle were cut away. Thankfully, medicine has discovered
that's not necessary. Now, a partial or modified radical mastectomy
is performed, where either part of the breast tissue, or the entire
breast, and possibly a portion of the lymph nodes, are removed. On
the whole, a mastectomy isn't too bad a surgery, although everyone
is different. I found both of mine to be quite easy, but you will
wake up with drain tubes, which youÂ’ll typically have for at
least a week.
• Chemotherapy: Chemotherapy is defined by Wikipedia as
the use of chemical substances to treat disease. In its modern-day
use, it refers primarily to cytotoxic drugs used to treat cancer.”
This can be a frightening prospect for anyone. We've all heard
horror stories about how very debilitating chemotherapy can be.
However, much progress has been made in the management of chemo's
side effects, to the point that, once you have the right management
tools, you can continue to enjoy the activities you typically do.
Chemo is a means of treating your cancer systemically and is
typically recommended for those whose tumor is larger than a certain
size and/or the cancer has spread to your lymph nodes. The thinking
is that if your cancer has had the opportunity to access the rest of
your body, your treatment should be systemic as well.
• Radiation: Radiation therapy is typically a localized
treatment option, where rapidly dividing cells are damaged. Cancer
cells are very rapid dividers, so radiation is an effective option.
Typically, radiation therapy is given for about six weeks, five days
a week. It's very much like lying still for an x-ray, only instead
of lasting a second or two, it lasts a couple of minutes. It can
cause fatigue, toward the end and slightly after, and can cause a
sunburn effect on your skin.
• Hormone Therapy: Many breast cancers are
hormone-dependent. In these cancers, there are receptors on the
tumor that can be filled with estrogen. The thinking is that when
estrogen fills these receptors, it causes the tumor to grow. This is
called estrogen-receptor positive (ER). These cancers respond well
to hormone therapy and the hormone therapy drug that will be
recommended for you will depend on your menopausal status. These
drugs are in pill form and you take them once a day. The most
popular of these drugs, for pre-menopausal women, is Tamoxifen and,
for post-menopausal women Femara or Arimidex. There is new evidence
that suggests that taking Femara, after taking Tamoxifen for five
years, increases survival rates.
• Immunotherapy: There is a fourth modality of treatment
on the horizon and it's called Immunotherapy. This involves getting
your immune system to fight your cancer and there is, and will be, a
lot of research being done in this area.
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