CANCER
TREATMENT MYTHS:
ANY TRUTH TO THESE COMMON BELIEFS?
Misconceptions
about cancer treatment might make you feel confused or unsure when choosing
a treatment.
Learn
the truth so that you can feel more comfortable with your cancer treatment.
Timothy
Moynihan, M.D., The Mayo Clinic
As
advances in the treatment of cancer have increased, you may have discovered
more opportunities to learn the facts about this disease. Yet some misleading
ideas about cancer treatment still persist. Timothy Moynihan, M.D.,
a cancer specialist at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., helps debunk some
of the most common misconceptions about cancer treatment and explains
the truth.
A positive attitude is all you need to beat cancer.
Although
many popular books on cancer talk about fighters and optimists, there's
no scientific proof that a positive attitude gives you an advantage
in cancer treatment or improves your chance of being cured.
What
a positive attitude can do is improve the quality of your life during
cancer treatment and beyond. You may be more likely to stay active,
maintain ties to family and friends, and continue social activities.
In turn, this may enhance your feeling of well-being and help you find
the strength to deal with your cancer. A positive attitude may also
help you become a more informed and active partner with your doctor
during cancer treatment.
If we can put a man on the moon, we should have a cure for cancer
by now.
Cancer
actually includes a large group of diseases. Each can have many different
causes. Despite advances in diagnosis and treatment, doctors still have
much to learn about what triggers a cell to become cancerous and why
some people with cancer do better than others.
In
addition, cancer is a moving target. Cancer cells may continue to mutate
and change during the course of the disease. This may lead to the cancer
cells no longer responding to the chemotherapy drugs or radiation treatments
that were given initially.
Finding
the cure for cancer is, in fact, proving to be more
complex than mastering the engineering and physics required for spaceflight.
Drug
companies and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are blocking or
withholding new cancer treatments.
Going
through cancer treatment is never easy. Even when things are going well,
it's natural to become frustrated and wish for a magic bullet to cure
your cancer. You might even wonder if such a treatment is being withheld.
That's
not the case. Your doctor and the FDA, which must approve new drugs
before they can be marketed, are your allies. As such, they make your
safety a high priority. Unfortunately, scientific studies to determine
cancer treatment's safety and effectiveness take time. That may create
the appearance or lead to reports that effective new treatments are
being blocked. However, the thorough testing required has kept many
unsafe and ineffective drugs from being used in the United States.
Hiding
or withholding an important treatment advance would be difficult because
the public has many ways to access medical information. In addition
to verbal, print, video and electronic means, you may even gain access
to information about experimental treatments by participating in a clinical
trial.
If
you still believe a cure is being purposefully withheld, ask yourself
why a doctor may choose to specialize in cancer research. Oftentimes
doctors go into cancer research because they have a family member or
friend affected by the disease. They're just as interested in finding
a cure as anyone else, for exactly the same reason — it affects
them personally. They hate to see a loved one in pain and don't wish
to lose this person. They also want to spare others what they have gone
through.
As
to suggestions that organizations keep cures a secret because they would
otherwise lose their sources of funding, human nature makes this scenario
highly unlikely. It is indeed an unusual human being who would pass
up the prestige associated with finding a cure in order to keep funds
flowing to a research organization. A cancer cure could easily be sold
for very large profits and would have the potential to bring in even
more money than current treatments.
Regular checkups and today's medical technology can detect all
cancer early.
Routine
screening has clearly led to an impressive decrease in deaths from several
cancers, including cervical, breast and colon cancers. Overall cancer
deaths in the United States have declined for the last few years. Although
regular medical care can indeed increase your ability to detect cancer
early, it can't guarantee it. Cancer is a complicated disease, and there's
no sure way to always spot it. Cancer cells can grow anywhere in your
body — often deep within it. Until the cancer reaches a certain
size, there isn't a technology or exam capable of detecting it. By the
time you feel a breast cancer lump, for instance, the cancer may have
been there for four to six years. Scientists are looking for tests capable
of detecting cancers even earlier, but these tests are experimental
and have not yet been proved effective.
Undergoing cancer treatment means you can't live at home, work
or go about your usual activities.
Most
people with cancer are treated on an outpatient basis in their home
community. At times it may be helpful to travel to a specialty medical
center for treatment. But often, doctors at such a medical center can
work with doctors in your hometown so that you can be with your family
and friends and perhaps even resume work. In fact, many people do work
full or part time during their treatment. A great deal of time and effort
has gone into making it easier for people to live more normal lives
during their treatment. For example, drugs are now available to help
better control nausea. The result is you're often able to work and stay
active during your treatment.
Cancer is always painful.
A needle biopsy can disturb cancer cells, causing them to travel to
other parts of the body.
There's
no conclusive evidence that needle biopsy (fine-needle aspiration) causes
cancer cells to spread (metastasize). This procedure is sometimes used
to diagnose cancer. It involves inserting a thin, hollow needle connected
to a syringe into a suspicious lump and removing fluid and tissue for
further examination.
For
many years, there has been concern that needle biopsy may disturb cancer
cells and cause them to spread. However, a study published in 2004 compared
people who did and didn't have a needle biopsy before cancer treatment.
Those who had the procedure showed no increased spread of cancer.
Exposing a tumor to air during surgery causes cancer to spread.
Surgery
is one of medicine's main weapons against cancer. It can't cause cancer
or cause it to spread. Because you may feel worse during your recovery
than you did before surgery, you might believe your surgery caused your
cancer to spread. However, "air hitting the tumor" doesn't
cause cancer to spread. In some animal studies, removing the main tumor
mass sometimes temporarily facilitates growth of cancer that has already
spread (metastasized), but this hasn't been seen conclusively in humans.
Some
tumors will grow to a certain size and become relatively dormant. This
occurs if the tumors secrete a substance called endostatin, which suppresses
tumor growth in both the primary tumor as well as in distant sites.
Unfortunately
all tumors, no matter what their size, secrete angiostatin, which promotes
tumor growth — particularly the growth of new blood vessels that
supply oxygen and nutrients to the tumor. Therefore, if you have a large
primary tumor and only microscopic metastases, the endostatin produced
by the large tumor may prevent the metastases from growing. But if you
remove the main tumor, you remove the source of growth-inhibiting endostatin,
and the metastases, which produce angiostatin, may continue to grow.
Although
it's possible that during surgery your doctor may find the cancer more
widespread than previously thought, an operation can't cause cancer
to spread nor can it cause cancer to start. Don't delay or refuse treatment
because of this myth. Surgically removing cancer is often the first
and most important treatment.
Everyone with the same kind of cancer gets the same kind of treatment.
Your
doctor tailors your treatment to you. What treatment you receive depends
on where your cancer is, whether or how much it has spread, and how
it's affecting your body functions and general health.
In
addition, cells from the same type of cancer may have different features
in different people. These differences can affect how the cells respond
to treatment, which in turn may influence your doctor's recommendations.
Current
research is focused on tailoring treatments to you based on your genes.
These genes, which you're born with, may show that your body processes
certain chemotherapy treatments and drugs differently than someone else.
Genetic testing on your cancer cells can also help guide your treatment.
Everyone who has cancer has to have treatment.
It's
up to you whether or not you want to treat your cancer. You can decide
this after consulting with your doctor and learning about your options.
A person with cancer might choose to forgo treatment if he or she has:
-
A
slow-growing cancer. Some people with cancer might not
have any signs or symptoms. Lab tests might reveal that the cancer
is growing very slowly. These people might choose to wait and watch
the cancer. If it suddenly begins growing quicker, treatment is
always an option later. Keep in mind, though, that not treating
the cancer makes it harder to stop it from spreading.
-
Other
medical conditions. If you have other significant
illnesses you may choose not to treat your cancer, as the
cancer may not be the biggest threat to your health. This may be
especially true in the case of a slow-growing cancer.
-
A
late-stage cancer. If the burden of treatment side effects
outweighs the benefit that treatment can bring, you might choose
not to be treated. But that doesn't mean your doctor will abandon
you. Your doctor can still provide comfort measures, such as pain
relief
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