Lymphoma? done with treatment!?!


Question: Lymphoma!? done with treatment!!?
My best friend has her last chemo session soon, and i'm wondering what that means!.!.!. does it mean she's clear of the cancer!? or is that all the chemo that her body can handle!? what does it mean that she's stopping the treatment!?Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
Treatment is generally defined by a treatment protocol!. This is a certain amount of a particular chemo agent, given at set intervals, for a certain duration!. All these factors (amount, interval, duration) is determined by clinical trials, which establish how much and how often and for how long the chemo agent must be administered to be effective!. (They don't just make this stuff up when you show up at the oncologist's office!.)

So, done with treatment means your friend has reached the end of the treatment protocol!. Hopefully, it means the cancer is gone!. They will likely do some testing to verify that!. If not, they are often able to choose additional treatment options (different chemo agent, radiation, etc!.)!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

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Hodgkin lymphoma is a localized or disseminated malignant proliferation of cells of the lymphoreticular system, primarily involving lymph node tissue, spleen, liver, and bone marrow!. Symptoms include painless lymphadenopathy, sometimes with fever, night sweats, unintentional weight loss, pruritus, splenomegaly, and hepatomegaly!. Diagnosis is based on lymph node biopsy!. Treatment is curative in about 75% of cases and consists of chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy!.
Non-Hodgkin lymphomas are a heterogeneous group of disorders involving malignant monoclonal proliferation of lymphoid cells in lymphoreticular sites, including lymph nodes, bone marrow, the spleen, the liver, and the GI tract!. Presenting symptoms usually include peripheral lymphadenopathy!. However, some forms present without adenopathy but with abnormal lymphocytes in circulation!. Compared with Hodgkin lymphoma, there is a greater likelihood of disseminated disease at the time of diagnosis!. Diagnosis is usually based on lymph node and/or bone marrow biopsy!. Treatment includes radiation and/or chemotherapy, with stem cell transplantation usually reserved for salvage therapy after incomplete remission or relapse!.Www@Answer-Health@Com





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