Chemotherapy


Chemotherapy (say: kee-moe-ther-ah-pee) is the use of medicines to treat cancer. Cancer is a disease that causes normal cells in the body to grow out of control. If left untreated, these cells can grow throughout the body making the person very sick. Chemotherapy medicines stop the growth of cancer cells. As the cancer goes away, the patient starts to feel better.

Both adults and kids can get cancer. No matter what age a person is, chemotherapy (also called chemo) may be used to treat the cancer. Sometimes people need to stay in the hospital to get chemo. But often, a person can just come to the hospital or doctor's office for treatment and go home afterward.

How Is Chemo Given?

Just as you can get other medicines by taking a pill or getting a shot, there are several ways to get chemo. A doctor called an oncologist (say: on-kah-loh-jist) will make the decision about which type of chemo is best for the patient. A person might take a pill or liquid or get an injection (shot). Another way of giving chemo is through an IV line, which is short for an intravenous (say: in-truh-vee-nus) line.

An IV line is a tiny tube that's put into a vein through someone's skin, usually on the arm. The IV line is attached to a bag or pump that holds the medicine. The chemo medicine flows from the bag or pump into the vein, which puts the medicine into the blood. Once the medicine is in the blood, it can travel through the body and attack cancer cells.

Sometimes doctors will insert a permanent IV line into a larger vein in the upper chest. This type of IV line is also called a catheter (say ka-thuh-ter). It allows a person to get chemo and other medicines easily without having to get a needle in the arm each time. Although it's called permanent, this type of catheter only stays in place until the person is finished with his or her cancer treatments. In addition to letting a person get chemo without having a new IV line inserted each time, a catheter lets doctors and nurses take blood samples and give other treatments without sticking the person with a needle.

Some cancers are treated with chemo alone. Others require a combination of treatments including chemo, radiation, and surgery. Like chemo, radiation kills cancer cells. Surgery can be used to remove big lumps of cancer cells called tumors.

What's Chemo Like?

The kinds of treatment used to fight cancer depend on the type of cancer and in how many parts of the body the cancer is found. Chemo is given on a schedule. Some people receive chemo every day. Others receive it every week or every month. Doctors use the word cycles to describe chemo because the treatment periods happen between periods of rest when a person isn't getting any treatment. These breaks allows the person's body to heal from the effects the chemo has on the cancer and on the body's normal cells.

Breaks from treatment are important because, during chemo, a person might experience some temporary health problems. These temporary problems are called side effects. All medications can have side effects. In their effort to kill cancer cells, chemo drugs can make normal cells sick. Breaks during chemo cycles allow time for normal cells to get better.

Because everyone's different, some people will have fewer side effects than others. Common side effects of chemotherapy are loss of appetite, vomiting, and temporary hair loss. A person receiving chemo also might feel tired, bruise easily, and catch infections easily.

There are medicines available that can help people feel better if they have side effects from chemo. Just having family and friends around for support can also make a person feel better. Doctors, nurses, and other members of the cancer treatment team will try to answer a person's questions, help them get well, and make them comfortable.

Coping With Chemo

Here are some tips for a person who's getting chemo:

  • Get plenty of sleep.
  • Eat healthy meals and drink plenty of fluids.
  • Wash hands regularly, especially before eating, after using the bathroom, and after touching animals. This helps to prevent infection.
  • Avoid large crowds and anyone who has a cold, the flu, or chicken pox. It's not a good time to get sick.

After chemo is over, the person will need to visit the doctor for checkups. The doctor will want to know how the person is feeling and check to see if the chemo did its job treating the cancer.

If you know someone who has cancer, the person will appreciate your phone calls, email messages, cards and letters, and visits. Let the person know you care and still want to spend time together.