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What is adjuvant therapy
Adjuvant therapy is an additional cancer treatment given after the primary treatment such as surgery, to lessen the chance of your cancer coming back 1. Even if your surgery was successful at removing all visible cancer, microscopic bits of cancer sometimes remain and are undetectable with current methods.
Adjuvant therapy given before the main treatment is called neoadjuvant therapy. This type of adjuvant therapy can also decrease the chance of the cancer coming back, and it’s often used to make the primary treatment — such as an operation or radiation treatment — easier or more effective.
Adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy can cause significant side effects, and these treatments don’t benefit everyone.
Figure 1. Adjuvant therapy
[Source 1 ]Which treatments are used as adjuvant therapies?
Types of cancer treatment that are used as adjuvant therapy include:
- Chemotherapy. Chemotherapy uses drugs to kill cancer cells throughout the body.
- Hormone therapy. For cancers sensitive to hormones, certain treatments can stop hormone production in your body or block the effect of hormones.
- Radiation therapy. Radiation therapy uses high-powered energy beams, such as X-rays or protons, to kill cancer cells. It can be given internally or externally.
- Immunotherapy. Immunotherapy works with your body’s immune system to fight off any remaining cancer cells by stimulating your body’s own defenses or supplementing them.
- Targeted therapy. Targeted therapy is designed to alter specific abnormalities present within cancer cells. For example, a targeted therapy is available to block the action of a protein called human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) in women with breast cancer.
How effective is adjuvant therapy?
Because none of these treatments is completely harmless, it’s important to determine the risks of adjuvant therapy versus the benefits. The following factors can help you and your doctor determine whether adjuvant therapy is appropriate for you and, if so, which type:
- Type of cancer. Treating certain types of cancer, such as breast and colon cancer, with adjuvant therapy can be very beneficial. For some other types of cancer, there might not be a benefit.
- Stage of cancer. A cancer’s stage refers to the extent of the cancer. If the cancer is at a very early stage — before it has had time to spread — then the chance of cancer recurring after surgery may be very small. Adjuvant therapy may offer little benefit in this case. But if a cancer is at a later stage or it has spread to nearby lymph nodes, adjuvant therapy may be more beneficial.
- Number of lymph nodes involved. The more lymph nodes involved, the greater the chance that cancer cells will be left behind after local therapy, such as surgery.
- Hormone receptivity. Hormone therapy won’t be effective if your tumor is not hormonally sensitive.
- Other cancer-specific changes. Certain cancers may have specific changes within their cells that indicate the likelihood that your cancer will return, making adjuvant therapy more likely to be beneficial. If tests show your cancer is unlikely to recur, adjuvant therapy may offer little benefit.
Receiving adjuvant therapy doesn’t guarantee your cancer won’t recur. It can, however, help reduce the risk that your cancer will come back.
Why is adjuvant therapy beneficial?
Even though adjuvant therapy increases the overall cancer treatment time, it has been shown to improve the chance of cure for many types of cancer. Compared with neoadjuvant therapy, adjuvant therapy has some specific advantages. One advantage of starting with surgery is that it can be performed quickly after diagnosis. Thus, the benefit of the most important treatment approach is delivered as soon as possible.
Another important benefit of starting with surgery is that once the tumor is removed, doctors have more information about the stage, location, and molecular features of the tumor. This is more accurate than preoperative scans, which sometimes can give misleading information about the size of a cancer, how extensively it invades surrounding tissues, and whether or not regional lymph nodes are involved. After surgery, the removed tissue can be carefully examined under a microscope by a pathologist, and the exact size, extent of spread, and tissues involved by the cancer can be determined. In addition, a pathologist can carefully look for specific hormone receptors or specific mutations that may be present, which may affect which form of adjuvant therapy would be best to use.
Adjuvant therapy can therefore be precisely tailored to the needs of a patient based on the prognosis of his or her individual cancer to provide an optimal recipe for cure.
Is adjuvant therapy for you?
As you’re deciding whether adjuvant therapy is right for you, you might want to discuss the following issues with your doctor:
- What procedures are you considering? Find out exactly what will be expected of you during adjuvant therapy. Do you have to see your doctor for injections or will you take pills at home?
- What are the side effects? What side effects are you willing to live with? What might be too much to tolerate? Do you plan to work or stay active during treatment? Could side effects interfere with your plans? How long will these side effects last? Are any of these side effects permanent?
- How long will you need to take this therapy? Adjuvant treatments may last from just a few weeks to as long as 10 years. Understand what the recommendations are and why.
- What are the chances you’ll stay cancer-free? Understand how likely it is that your cancer will return if you decide against further therapy and how much improvement you might experience if you do undergo additional therapy. Your doctor can estimate how well your treatment will work based on comparisons with data from studies of other people with your same type of cancer, at the same stage and given the same treatment.
- How is your overall health? People who are otherwise healthy may experience fewer side effects during adjuvant therapy and are more likely to benefit from the therapy. People with severe health problems may be more likely to experience side effects during adjuvant therapy and may be less likely to benefit from the therapy. If you have significant other health problems, such as heart disease or severe lung disease, then the adjuvant treatments may not help you achieve your health goals.
- What is your preference? Some people want to do everything possible to reduce the chance that their cancer will return, no matter the side effects. Others choose not to tolerate extra side effects if there is likely to be little benefit. Ask your doctor what they recommend and why. These decisions can be very difficult, and your doctor can help you decide whether or not the benefits of adjuvant therapy outweigh the risks for you.
- What is the cost of the adjuvant therapy? Most adjuvant therapies recommended by your doctor will be covered by health insurance. However, some medications and procedures can carry substantial out-of-pocket expenses or copays. Make sure you understand how adjuvant treatment may impact your finances and if the benefits are worth the expense to you.