Palliative care is care that is meant to make a person feel better. Palliative chemotherapy is chemo given to help relieve the symptoms of cancer and to make a person feel better, with less pain, easier breathing, etc. The goal is not to cure the cancer.
Palliative cancer therapy is treatment specifically directed to help improve the symptoms associated with terminal cancer.
The primary objective of palliative care is to improve the quality of the remainder of a patient's life.
Care can include surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, symptomatic treatments resulting from cancer, and side effects of treatment.
Palliative XRT is Radiation Therapy meant to alleviate, or relieve a problem without actually curing it.
The goal of radiation therapy in treating liver cancer is to use targeted doses of radiation to destroy or damage cancer cells, ultimately shrinking or controlling the growth of tumours. Radiation therapy is a localized treatment, meaning it specifically targets the area where cancer is present. It can be used in different ways for liver cancer: Curative Intent (Radical Radiation Therapy): In some cases, radiation therapy is used with curative intent, aiming to eliminate the cancer. This is more likely in cases where the tumor is confined to the liver and surgery is not a feasible option. Palliative Care: In cases where a cure may not be achievable, radiation therapy can be used to relieve symptoms and improve the quality of life. This is known as palliative radiation therapy. It can help alleviate pain, reduce the size of tumors, and manage other symptoms associated with liver cancer. Before or After Surgery: Radiation therapy may be used before surgery (neoadjuvant therapy) to shrink tumors and make them easier to remove, or after surgery (adjuvant therapy) to kill any remaining cancer cells. Combination with Other Treatments: Radiation therapy is often used in combination with other treatments such as surgery, chemotherapy, or targeted therapies to enhance the overall effectiveness of the treatment plan. Liver cancer can be primary (originating in the liver) or secondary (resulting from the spread of cancer from other organs). The decision to use radiation therapy depends on various factors, including the type and stage of liver cancer, the location and size of tumors, the patient's overall health, and the goal of treatment (curative or palliative).
Surgery for tumor removal, biopsy, or size reduction is associated with postoperative pain and local nerve damage, which may be both severe and difficult to alleviate. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy also can produce.
When total cure or removal of illness is not possible as in terminal cancer patients treatment is given for the symptoms that trouble the patient such as pain relief treatment. This is called palliative therapy and is most useful for people with terminal illness, those who are in Intensive Care Units and old age related irreversible changes.
bone and brain metastases
not to cure the cancer, but to relieve the symptoms of a patient who cannot be cured
Prostate cancer responds well to radiation therapy
Supportive cancer therapy is the use of medicines to counteract unwanted effects of cancer treatment.
Eigentler, T. K., U. M. Caroli, P. Radny, and C. Garbe. "Palliative Therapy of Disseminated Malignant Melanoma: A Systematic Review of 41 Randomised Clinical Trials." Lancet Oncology 4 (December 2003): 748-759.
Patients taking opioids for pain relief can develop tolerance and dependence. Tolerance develops when a patient requires increasing amounts of medication to produce pain reduction. Dependence shows characteristic withdrawal.
With the help of Gene therapy we can replace or supress the cancer gene