Cancer Treatment Options

Comprehensive Guides to Understanding Your Treatment

Understanding Cancer Treatment

Cancer treatment has evolved dramatically over the past decades. Today, oncologists can choose from a wide array of treatment modalities - often using multiple approaches in combination to achieve the best outcomes. The right treatment plan depends on many factors including cancer type, stage, molecular characteristics, and your overall health and preferences.

Our comprehensive treatment guides explain how each modality works, what to expect during treatment, how to manage side effects, and what questions to ask your oncology team.

Chemotherapy

Systemic Treatment

Uses powerful drugs to destroy cancer cells throughout the body. Remains a cornerstone of cancer treatment for many types.

  • Works by targeting rapidly dividing cells
  • Can be curative, adjuvant, or palliative
  • Given IV, oral, or by injection
  • Multiple drug classes with different mechanisms
  • Side effects manageable with modern supportive care
Complete Guide →

Immunotherapy

Systemic Treatment

Harnesses the power of your immune system to fight cancer. Has revolutionized treatment for many cancer types.

  • Checkpoint inhibitors (PD-1, PD-L1, CTLA-4)
  • CAR-T cell therapy
  • Cancer vaccines
  • Monoclonal antibodies
  • Can provide durable long-term responses

Guide coming soon

Targeted Therapy

Systemic Treatment

Drugs that target specific proteins or genes in cancer cells, blocking their growth and spread.

  • Requires molecular testing of tumor
  • Targets specific mutations or proteins
  • Often less toxic than chemotherapy
  • Examples: EGFR, ALK, HER2, BRAF inhibitors
  • Precision medicine approach

Guide coming soon

Radiation Therapy

Local Treatment

Uses high-energy rays or particles to destroy cancer cells in specific areas of the body.

  • External beam radiation (EBRT)
  • Brachytherapy (internal radiation)
  • Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS, SBRT)
  • Often combined with surgery or chemotherapy
  • Advanced techniques minimize damage to healthy tissue

Guide coming soon

Surgery

Local Treatment

Physical removal of cancer tissue. Often the first-line treatment for localized solid tumors.

  • Curative intent (complete removal)
  • Debulking (removing bulk of tumor)
  • Palliative (relieving symptoms)
  • Minimally invasive techniques available
  • Often combined with other treatments

Guide coming soon

Hormone Therapy

Systemic Treatment

Blocks or lowers hormones that fuel certain cancers, particularly breast and prostate cancer.

  • Tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors for breast cancer
  • ADT (androgen deprivation) for prostate cancer
  • Long-term treatment (5-10 years often)
  • Generally well-tolerated
  • Can dramatically reduce recurrence risk

Guide coming soon

Stem Cell Transplant

Specialized Treatment

Replaces diseased bone marrow with healthy stem cells. Used primarily for blood cancers.

  • Autologous (your own cells)
  • Allogeneic (donor cells)
  • Used for leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma
  • Can be curative for certain cancers
  • Requires specialized center and intensive care

Guide coming soon

Clinical Trials

Research & Access

Research studies testing new treatments or new uses of existing treatments. May provide access to cutting-edge therapies.

  • Phases I, II, III, and IV trials
  • Access to newest treatments
  • Close monitoring and care
  • Help advance cancer research
  • Appropriate for many patients, not just last resort
Learn More →

Multimodal Treatment Approach

Most cancer treatment today involves multiple modalities used together or in sequence:

Choosing the Right Treatment

Your oncologist will recommend treatment based on:

Don't hesitate to get a second opinion or ask questions. Understanding your treatment plan empowers you to be an active participant in your care.