CERVICAL CANCER

Treatment for Cervical Cancer — Page 5

By Sherry Baker @SherryNewsViews
 | 
May 18, 2023

Chemoradiation — combining radiation and chemotherapy — is usually the standard treatment for many patients with cervical cancer in all but the most advanced stages of the disease. The chemotherapy drugs used during chemoradiation are often cisplatin or cisplatin plus fluorouracil, and the radiation therapy includes both external beam radiation and brachytherapy. Sometimes chemo is given without radiation for a period before chemoradiation is started. Chemotherapy may also be used alone after the radiation therapy has stopped.

Chemotherapy drugs can treat cervical cancer that has recurred after treatment. When the cancer has metastasized to other organs and tissues outside of your pelvis, this stage of cervical cancer is not usually considered curable. Chemotherapy, used with radiation or alone, may be useful in slowing the growth of the cancer and helping to relieve symptoms.

Most standard chemo regimens include a platinum drug (cisplatin or carboplatin) given with another chemotherapy drug, such as paclitaxel (Taxol), gemcitabine (Gemzar), or topotecan, the American Cancer Society points out.

Targeted therapy for cervical cancer

As researchers have learned more about how malignant cells grow and change, they’ve developed new drugs and other therapies that target cellular changes. Targeted therapies work differently from standard chemotherapy. Although, like chemo, they attack specific cancer cells, they don’t harm normal cells.

Some targeted therapies are used to help treat advanced cervical cancer.

Monoclonal antibody therapy is a type of targeted therapy made from antibodies created in a lab from one type of immune system cell, the National Cancer Institute explains. The antibodies lock onto substances on cancer cells or normal substances that aid cancer growth. By attaching to those substances, monoclonal antibodies kill the cancer cells, stop the cells from growing, or keep them from spreading.

Given by infusion, monoclonal antibodies may be used alone or, like stealth anti-cancer weapons, to carry drugs, toxins, or radioactive material directly to malignant cells.

For example, to grow and spread, cancer tumors need angiogenesis — the process of forming new blood vessels to keep tumors nourished. Bevacizumab (Avastin) is a targeted therapy created to block the new blood vessel growth. Called an angiogenesis inhibitor, bevacizumab is a monoclonal antibody that binds to a specific protein to fight cancer. Cancerous tumors need the protein, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), to make new blood vessels.

Bevacizumab is used in the medical arsenal to help slow down and treat cervical cancer that has spread to other parts of the body and to treat cervical cancer that has recurred after other treatments have stopped working.

This targeted therapy is frequently used with chemo for a time. Then, if the cancer stops growing, bevacizumab may replace the chemotherapy until the cancer starts growing again. 

 

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Updated:  

May 18, 2023

Reviewed By:  

Janet O’Dell, RN