New Treatments for Lung Cancer
New treatments for lung cancer approaches include photodynamic therapy, electro cautery, cryosurgery, laser surgery, targeted therapy and internal radiation. Each lung cancer treatment has its own specific ability to fight cancer and its own set of side effects and possible complications.
Therefore while there are many options, lung cancer treatment needs to be performed judiciously and only after very careful consideration of a number of factors. Researchers are learning more about the inner workings of lung cancer cells that control their growth and spread. This is being used to develop New treatments for lung cancer.
These drugs work differently from standard chemotherapy drugs. They often have different (and less severe) side effects. Many of these treatments are already being tested in clinical trials to see if they can help people with advanced lung cancer live longer or relieve their symptoms.
These include Anti-angiogenesis drugs: For cancers to grow, new blood vessels must develop to nourish the cancer cells within tumors. This process is called angiogenesis. New drugs that inhibit angiogenesis are being studied as lung cancer treatments.
Some have already been successfully used for other cancer types and has been shown to help patients with some types of non-small cell lung cancer, and is now being tested in small cell lung cancer.
New treatments for lung cancer also include there is also the possibilities of vaccines: Several types of vaccines for boosting the body’s immune response against lung cancer cells are being tested in clinical trials. Unlike vaccines against infections like measles or mumps, these vaccines are designed to help treat, not prevent, lung cancer.
One possible advantage of these types of treatments is that they seem to have very limited side effects, so they might be useful in people who can’t tolerate other treatments. At this time, vaccines are only available in clinical trials.
