Is 6 months of chemo normal?

A course of chemotherapy usually takes between 3 to 6 months, although it can be more or less than that. The treatment will include one or more chemotherapy drugs.
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How many rounds of chemo is normal?

Receiving chemotherapy in cycles helps to effectively kill off the cancerous cells, while allowing the person's body time to replenish its healthy cells. A single course of chemotherapy will typically involve four to eight chemotherapy cycles.
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How long is too long for chemo?

Waiting for a diagnosis

The target is that you should not wait more than 28 days from referral to finding out whether you have cancer.
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How long can a cancer patient stay on chemo?

For most cancers where palliative chemotherapy is used, this number ranges from 3-12 months. The longer the response, the longer you can expect to live.
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Is 6 months of chemo normal for breast cancer?

Typically, if you have early-stage breast cancer, you'll undergo chemotherapy treatments for three to six months, but your doctor will adjust the timing to your circumstances. If you have advanced breast cancer, treatment may continue beyond six months.
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Adjuvant treatment of colon cancer: three vs six months of FOLFOX/CAPOX



Can cancer spread while on chemo?

While chemotherapy is one of the oldest and most successful ways of treating cancer, it doesn't always work. So, yes, cancer can spread during chemotherapy. Spreading could mean the tumor keeps growing, or that the original tumor shrinks, but cancer metastasizes, forming tumors in other areas of the body.
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How long can you take maintenance chemo?

How long you receive maintenance therapy depends on many factors. When used for potentially curable cancers during remission, maintenance treatment is given for a specified length of time, usually between 6 weeks and 2 years.
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How do you know when to stop chemo?

Cancer treatment is at its most effective the first time that it's used. If you've undergone three or more chemotherapy treatments for your cancer and the tumors continue to grow or spread, it may be time for you to consider stopping chemotherapy.
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How do doctors know how long you have left to live?

There are numerous measures – such as medical tests, physical exams and the patient's history – that can also be used to produce a statistical likelihood of surviving a specific length of time.
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What percentage of chemo patients survive?

The survival rate for those diagnosed in stages 1-3 is near 100% and about 71% for stage 4. The five-year survival rate is 90% for medullary carcinoma and 7% for anaplastic carcinoma.
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How do you know if chemo is working?

The best way to tell if chemotherapy is working for your cancer is through follow-up testing with your doctor. Throughout your treatment, an oncologist will conduct regular visits, and blood and imaging tests to detect cancer cells and whether they've grown or shrunk.
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What happens after 2nd chemo treatment?

Nausea, vomiting, and taste changes

You may experience nausea (feeling like you might throw up) and vomiting (throwing up) after your last chemotherapy treatment. It should go away in 2 to 3 weeks. Your appetite may continue to be affected due to taste changes you may have experienced during your treatment.
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How long does it take to recover from chemotherapy?

The rule of thumb I usually tell my patients is that it takes about two months of recovery time for every one month of treatment before energy will return to a baseline. Everyone is different but at least this gives you a ballpark.
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How many cycles of chemo can you have?

During a course of treatment, you usually have around 4 to 8 cycles of treatment. A cycle is the time between one round of treatment until the start of the next. After each round of treatment you have a break, to allow your body to recover.
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How many courses of chemo can a person have?

You may need four to eight cycles to treat your cancer. A series of cycles is called a course. Your course can take 3 to 6 months to complete. And you may need more than one course of chemo to beat the cancer.
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Does chemo get better or worse with each cycle?

The effects of chemo are cumulative. They get worse with each cycle.
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When a doctor says you have 6 months to live?

Medicare pays for hospice care if your doctor believes you have 6 months or less to live, the cancer does not respond to treatment, and your medical condition does not improve. But no one knows for sure how long you will live.
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What would you do if you only have 6 months to live?

Here are some suggestions for living your life as if you only had six months left:
  1. Stop caring so much what other people think. ...
  2. Be fearless.
  3. Finish the book you're writing, or the project, or the whatever it is. ...
  4. Tell everyone you love how much you love them. ...
  5. Never feel guilt again.
  6. Stop beating yourself up.
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Do oncologists lie about prognosis?

Oncologists often do not give honest prognostic and treatment-effect information to patients with advanced disease, trying not to “take away hope.” The authors, however, find that hope is maintained when patients with advanced cancer are given truthful prognostic and treatment information, even when the news is bad.
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Why do oncologists push chemo?

An oncologist may recommend chemotherapy before and/or after another treatment. For example, in a patient with breast cancer, chemotherapy may be used before surgery, to try to shrink the tumor. The same patient may benefit from chemotherapy after surgery to try to destroy remaining cancer cells.
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How much should a tumor shrink after chemo?

With chemotherapy, the tumor might shrink, but will still remain at the next imaging. That's an important concept for some people to understand about chemotherapy. In clinical trials for solid tumors, the tumor is said to have responded if it shrinks by more than 30 percent.
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What happens when chemo stops?

For instance, after you stop treatment, a new drug may come to the market, a clinical trial could open, or you may hear of a doctor who has a new way of treating the cancer you have. If so, you can always decide to start treatment again.
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How long can you live after chemo stops working?

Patients who died under palliative care service had longer median survival (120 days) after last chemotherapy as compared to other patients [120 and 43 days respectively, P < 0.001, Figure 2].
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What is maintenance after chemo?

Treatment that is given to help keep cancer from coming back after it has disappeared following the initial therapy. It may include treatment with drugs, vaccines, or antibodies that kill cancer cells, and it may be given for a long time.
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What are the signs of cancer coming back?

Warning signs of a distant recurrence tend to involve a different body part from the original cancer site. For example, if cancer recurs in the lungs, you might experience coughing and difficulty breathing, while a recurrence of cancer in the brain can cause seizures and headaches.
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