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Treatments can be classified into broad groups, based on how
they work and when they are used.
Local versus systemic therapy
Local therapy is intended to treat a tumor at the site without
affecting the rest of the body. Surgery and radiation therapy are
examples of local therapies.
Systemic therapy refers to drugs which can be given by mouth
or directly into the bloodstream to reach cancer cells anywhere in the
body. Chemotherapy, hormone therapy, and targeted therapy are systemic
therapies.
Adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy
Patients who have no detectable cancer after surgery are often
given adjuvant (additional) systemic therapy. Doctors believe that in
some cases cancer cells may break away from the primary breast tumor
and begin to spread through the body by way of the bloodstream even in
the early stages of the disease. These cells can't be felt on a
physical exam or seen on x-rays or other imaging tests, and they cause
no symptoms. But they can go on to become new tumors in other organs or
in bones. The goal of adjuvant therapy is to kill these hidden cells.
Not every patient needs adjuvant therapy. Generally speaking,
if the tumor is larger or the cancer has spread to lymph nodes, it is
more likely to have spread through the bloodstream. But there are other
features, some of which have been previously discussed, that may
determine if a patient should get adjuvant therapy. Recommendations
about adjuvant therapy are discussed in the sections on these
treatments and in the section on treatment by stage.
Some patients are given systemic therapy, usually
chemotherapy, before surgery to shrink a tumor in the hope it will
allow a less extensive operation to be done. This is called neoadjuvant therapy.
Last Medical Review: 09/18/2009 Last Revised: 09/18/2009
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