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What are treatments of Leukemia?Depends on the types and the extent of the diseases, patients may have different types of treatment. Types of treatment are Chemotherapy, Biological Therapy, Radiation Therapy, Stem Cell Transplantation. ChemotherapyMost patients with leukemia treated with chemotherapy. This type of cancer treatment uses drugs to kill leukemia cells. Depending on the type of leukemia, the patient may receive a single drug or a combination of two and more. People with leukemia may receive chemotherapy in several different ways:
The patient may receive the drugs in two ways:
Patients receive chemotherapy in cycles: a treatment period, then a recovery period, and then another treatment period. In some cases, the patient has chemotherapy as an outpatient at the hospital, at the doctor's office, or at home. However, depending on which drugs are given, and the patient's general health, a hospital stay may be necessary. Some people with chronic myeloid leukemia receive a new type of treatment called targeted therapy. Targeted therapy blocks the production of leukemia cells but does not harm normal cells. Gleevec, also called STI-571, is the first targeted therapy approved for chronic myeloid leukemia. Biological TherapyPeople with some types of leukemia have biological therapy. This type of treatment improves the body's natural defenses against cancer. The therapy is given by injection into a vein. For some patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, the type of biological therapy used is a monoclonal antibody. This substance binds to the leukemia cells. This therapy enables the immune system to kill leukemia cells in the blood and bone marrow. For some patients with chronic myeloid leukemia, the biological therapy is a natural substance called interferon. This substance can slow the growth of leukemia cells. Radiation TherapyRadiation therapy (as known as radiotherapy) uses high-energy rays to kill leukemia cells. For most patients, a large machine directs radiation at the spleen, the brain, or other parts of the body where leukemia cells have collected. Some patients receive radiation that is directed to the whole body. (Total-body irradiation usually is given before a bone marrow transplant.) Patients either receive radiation therapy at hospital or clinic. Stem cell transplantationSome patients with leukemia have stem cell transplantation. A stem cell transplant allows a patient to be treated with high doses of drugs, radiation, or both. The high doses destroy both leukemia cells and normal blood cells in the bone marrow. Later, the patient receives healthy stem cells through a flexible tube that is placed in a large vein in the neck or chest area. New blood cells develop from the transplanted stem cells.
There are several types of stem cell transplantation:
Stem cells may come from the patient or from a donor:
After a stem cell transplant, patients usually stay in the hospital for several weeks. The health care team protects patients from infection until the transplanted stem cells begin to produce enough white blood cells. |
©Copyrighted product from Surprising info Center(2008)-Authors:Lee Yih Jun, Ho Sie Cheng, Hii King Chai, Kee Hwaai Shian, Chua Caipern