Chemotherapy
When the growth of cancer cells is large enough to be detected, it means your body is having difficulty identifying the cancer and needs additional help. Help in killing cancer cells comes from two other forms of therapy: chemotherapy and hormone therapy.
These therapies are used to prevent cancer from returning in women who are at high risk for spread of the disease to other organs of the body and to control the disease when it is found in other areas of the body.
Most often, chemotherapy drugs are injected into the bloodstream through an intravenous needle (IV). Some are given as pills. Lengths of treatment vary and depend on factors revealed in your pathology report. The kind of chemotherapy drugs a patient is prescribed will depend on the information gathered at diagnosis including type, size, lymph node involvement, and other factors.
Learn more about chemotherapy by clicking on these links:
National Cancer Institute
Learn more about treatment options:
Radiation Therapy
Surgery
Hormone & Other Treatment Methods
Clinical Trials
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