Treatment Options
Determining which particular treatment is right for you depends on several things, including your general physical health, the type and stage of cancer you have, and the goal of therapy that you and your healthcare team have chosen.
Refers to what you and your healthcare team expect from your treatment. That goal is based on your unique situation and the personal values most important to you. For example, if your goal of therapy is to treat your cancer as aggressively as possible, your treatment may be different from that of someone whose disease is more advanced or severe, or who cannot tolerate certain side effects of therapy and therefore is more concerned about their overall quality of life. These people may instead determine that their goal of therapy is to be as comfortable as possible, or to maintain their normal activities of daily living as long as possible.
Treatment options could include surgery, chemotherapy, biotherapy, radiation therapy, and hormonal therapy, or a combination of any of these, depending on the type and stage of cancer that you have. With some tumors, surgical removal of all or as much tumor as possible is considered the best treatment depending on the size and location of the tumor and whether the cancer cells have spread to other parts of your body (referred to as metastasis).
If evidence suggests that tumor cells have indeed spread, or if some of the tumor could not be removed during surgery, then one or more of the other available therapies may be used.
- Consider different options
First, ask your healthcare team to talk with you about at least two treatment options. These options may be a combination of chemotherapy regimens, chemotherapy with other kinds of therapy, or a combination of other therapies.
- Analyze the benefits and risks
Next, ask your healthcare team about the potential benefits and risks associated with each therapy and how each therapy relates to your therapy goal.
Ask your healthcare team to write down or print out the information they share with you about how effective a therapy is and what the side effects are — regardless of which is most important to you. If you have someone helping you, you might want to take that person to the appointment with you — two heads are definitely better than one for remembering all the things you will be talking about. Another option is to tape record your appointment with your healthcare team's permission.
Take time to compare this information to your goal of therapy, and then discuss it with your healthcare team when you have gained a better understanding of all your treatment options.
Terms of Use | Privacy Statement | Copyright


























