Do you realize how painful it is to watch someone dear to you ravished by the fight with cancer? And it all has to do with the perception we have of cancer and with the very intense chemotherapy medication administered to patients diagnosed with this malignant disease. All sorts of remedies and therapeutic approaches have been developed, but in general lines, it is all reduced to types of chemotherapy.
Challenges are present within any solution meant to treat cancer. Based on a certain protocol that also involves decision making as to when, how long, how often and under what circumstances the treatment should be applied, the doctor will also choose from the potential types of chemotherapy that which is mostly indicated for a particular case.
The list with the types of chemotherapy drugs is pretty long and it might turn out a bit confusing for those that have never come into contact with chemo until now. It includes antineoplastics, topoisomerase inhibitors, anti-tumor antibiotics, alkylating agents, alkaloid drugs and so on. Each of the drug classes specified above may include dozens of types of medication out of which the doctor makes the selection.
From the many types of chemotherapy treatments the doctors determine the suitable one starting from a disease protocol specific to every patient in particular that mentions his/her reaction to the treatment. All the medical tests run for a certain patient contribute to influencing the decision for certain types of chemotherapy over others. For example, the response rate of a combination of drugs selected out of several types of chemotherapy may be of 70% which means that, out of 100, 70 patients with that type of tumor and the same stage of cancer have responded positively to that treatment.
The response rate may have been minimum or non-existent in the remaining thirty patients. In that case the doctor has to act fast and direct the patient to another of the many types of chemotherapy that might have a better effect.
All in all, the application and choice of types of chemotherapy are tricky. Doctors should constantly test and monitor their patients in order to make the most advantageous of decisions at crucial moments in the evolution of the disease. This line of work involves a great deal of responsibility and brings about a significant emotional burden when one’s life depends on a professional decision.