Before treatment starts, you will meet with a medical oncologist. This is a doctor who specializes in treating cancer with medicines such as chemo. The medical oncologist will discuss your treatment options with you and explain what you might expect.
Depending on the chemo medicines you receive, you may get them in one of these ways:
- I.V. (intravenous). The medicine is given through a catheter that's been put into a vein. The medicine may drip in slowly over several hours, or it may be given more quickly over a few minutes.
- Oral. You swallow these medicines as pills.
- Isolated limb perfusion (ILP). ILP is a type of regional limb therapy. For tumors on an arm or leg, sometimes the circulation to this limb is separated from the rest of the body (during minor surgery). The chemo is then put directly into an artery feeding the limb, allowing it to reach the tumor. The chemo is removed from the blood through a vein before it can reach the rest of the body. This process is repeated. This can allow your doctor to give higher doses of chemo to the tumor. This is because it's less likely to cause side effects in other parts of your body. This technique isn't available at all treatment centers and should be performed only at centers with experience in regional limb therapy.
Chemo is normally given in an outpatient setting. That means that you get it at a hospital, clinic, or doctor's office. Then you go home after your treatment. Less often, you may need to stay in the hospital during treatment. Your doctor will watch you for reactions during your treatments. Since each chemo treatment may last for a while, you may want to take along something that's comforting, such as music to listen to. You may also want to bring something to keep you busy, such as a book or a mobile device.
You'll receive chemo in cycles. This is done to reduce the damage to healthy cells and to give them a chance to recover. Each cycle consists of 1 or more days of treatment, followed by some time to rest. Cycles typically last 3 or 4 weeks. Your doctor will discuss your schedule with you.
When chemotherapy is given with radiation therapy to help it work better, it is called chemoradiation.