Hormonal therapy is like an insurance
policy For many women with hormone-receptor-positive
disease, hormonal therapy can be just as important as the other forms
of treatment. In fact, hormonal therapy can be even more effective than
chemotherapy. You and your doctor may consider hormonal therapy alone
or in sequence with chemotherapy, depending on your situation. |
The different hormonal therapies work to reduce the effect of estrogen on the body so that it can no longer turn on the growth of hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer cells. The different treatments either block hormone receptors, eliminate hormone receptors, or lower estrogen levels in the body. They have slightly different benefits and effects . The idea is to starve breast cancer cells of the estrogen that they need to grow. Hormonal therapy can be used: • To lower your risk of breast cancer Hormonal Therapies for Pre- and
Post Menopausal Cells can have estrogen receptors, progesterone receptors, both, or neither. If your doctor has not yet tested the cancer cells to see if they are hormone-receptor-positive, ask if he or she will order this test. If your doctor has told you that you will need multiple types of treatment, such as surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, usually you will take hormonal therapy last, after completing your other treatments. Any treatments you have after your first type of treatment are called "adjuvant." But you can also have hormonal therapy first, before surgery, to shrink a large tumor (larger than two centimeters, which is about one inch). When you have hormonal therapy before anything else, it is called "neoadjuvant" treatment. |
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