Frequently Asked Questions
As a metastatic breast cancer patient or caregiver, you must have many questions — as well you should, since the disease and its treatment is so complex.
Below are several frequently asked questions. We hope that the responses provided can ease some of your concerns, and encourage conversations with your healthcare team.
So please click on a question you'd like answered from the list below. You'll then receive the answer, and have the option to ask another question.
- Why me?
- How does GEMZAR fight metastatic breast cancer?
- What is the history of GEMZAR in treating metastatic breast cancer?
- How is GEMZAR given?
- What are the common side effects?
- When should I call my healthcare team?
- How can I find help to pay for my treatment?
Why Me?
"Why me?" is a question most people diagnosed with cancer ask themselves. Although lifestyle decisions such as smoking and alcohol intake can increase the risk for metastatic breast cancer, the disease can strike any woman at any time.
But you are not alone in this journey. In 2007, about 178,480 women in the United States had invasive breast cancer, and over 2.5 million women are survivors of the disease.1
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How does GEMZAR fight metastatic breast cancer?
GEMZAR is a chemotherapy drug used to treat certain kinds of cancer, such as metastatic breast cancer. The scientific (or generic) name for GEMZAR is gemcitabine HCl (for injection). Chemotherapy consists of treatment with one or more anticancer drugs that kill cancer cells. GEMZAR works by stopping the process that cells use to divide and repair themselves, leading to cell death.
GEMZAR in combination with paclitaxel is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the first-line treatment of patients with metastatic breast cancer after they have received another type of chemotherapy called an anthracycline, unless their medical condition did not allow them to receive an anthracycline. GEMZAR works by stopping the process that cancer cells in the breast and elsewhere use to divide and repair themselves, leading to cell death.
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What is the history of GEMZAR in treating metastatic breast cancer?
In 2004, GEMZAR received the indication for first-line metastatic breast cancer based on a large clinical trial of 529 patients, which revealed that GEMZAR combined with paclitaxel works better than paclitaxel alone.
GEMZAR has received regulatory approval for use in over 85 countries and continues to be widely studied in combination with other drugs and in other tumor types.
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How is GEMZAR given?
GEMZAR should be administered only by a qualified healthcare professional. GEMZAR therapy for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer is usually given twice in a 21-day treatment cycle. During treatment with GEMZAR therapy, you will receive GEMZAR and paclitaxel on Day 1 of the first week. At the next week's therapy (Day 8), you will likely receive GEMZAR alone. Each treatment cycle usually includes a week when you receive no medication at all — this rest week is a normal part of your treatment.
Your doctor or nurse will give you GEMZAR by mixing it into a solution and giving it through a needle into a vein — called intravenous infusion (IV). This will take about 30 minutes. Any other drugs given with GEMZAR will generally be given by IV either before or after GEMZAR. You will have regular blood tests before and during your treatment with GEMZAR plus paclitaxel. You and your doctor will usually decide before each treatment whether you should continue treatment or change dose based on what benefits you have received from previous treatment and what side effects you may have experienced. Your doctor may ask you to return for follow-up visits after you receive GEMZAR therapy, so he or she can monitor how you are doing.
If you have questions about how GEMZAR is given, please be sure to discuss them with your healthcare team.
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What are the common side effects?
Side effects you and your healthcare team should monitor include: low white blood cell count (neutropenia/leukopenia); low red blood cell count (anemia); low platelet count (thrombocytopenia); and liver.
Some additional side effects you'll want to monitor include: hair loss (alopecia); nerve damage (neuropathy); fatigue (tiredness); pain (arthralgia/myalgia); gastrointestinal upset, including nausea and/or vomiting and diarrhea; and shortness of breath.
For more information about side effects please click here.
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When should I call my healthcare team?
You are probably attuned to changes in your body now more than ever. You must never take these changes for granted. According to The American Cancer Society, as a person living with cancer, you should alert your healthcare team right away if you notice any changes in your body or experience any of the following symptoms during your chemotherapy treatment2:
- A fever of 100.5°F or greater
- Bleeding or unexplained bruising
- A rash or allergic reaction such as swelling or severe itching or wheezing
- Intense chills
- Pain or soreness at the chemotherapy injection site or catheter site
- Unusual pain including intense headaches
- Shortness of breath
- Prolonged diarrhea or vomiting
- Bloody stool or blood in your urine
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How can I find help to pay for my treatment?
"PatientOne" is the Lilly Oncology program that addresses financial, access, and claim issues for patients who are candidates for GEMZAR® (gemcitabine HCl for injection). Patients that can be helped include:
Call 1-866-4PatOne and let us know what you need. Live specialists are available Monday-Friday, 9 am-7 pm EST.
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Learn more about GEMZAR and Chemotherapy.
References:
- American Cancer Society. How Many Women Get Breast Cancer? Available at:
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/content/….
Accessed March 3, 2008. - The American Cancer Society. When Do I Call My Doctor? Available at:
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_1_7X_When_Do_I_Call_My_Doctor.asp.
Accessed March 14, 2007.
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