Gynecologic Oncologists
Treat cancers such as cervical, ovarian, and uterine cancer.
Medical oncology is the branch of medicine that uses medicines such as chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy to treat cancer. The job of a medical oncologist is to treat cancer patients with treatments like chemotherapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy.
A medical oncologist will collaborate with other doctors to develop the best treatment plan for you. They'll go over your cancer diagnosis with you, including the type and stage.
A medical oncologist will use chemotherapy, hormone therapy, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy to treat your cancer.
Radiation therapy will be used to treat your cancer by a radiation oncologist.
Tumors are removed surgically by a surgical oncologist. They also perform biopsies, which involve removing a small piece of tissue to be tested.
Treat cancers such as cervical, ovarian, and uterine cancer.
Myeloma, leukaemia, and lymphoma are all types of blood cancers.
Childhood cancer
Chemotherapy is the use of medications to treat cancer. These drugs kill cancer cells by completely stopping or slowing their growth. Chemotherapy is typically used to treat recurrent or metastatic cancers (cancer cells that reappear after treatment or spread to other parts of the body). Chemotherapy drugs are given orally, intravenously, or directly into the fluid surrounding the brain or abdominal cavity.
Chemotherapy is classified into three types:
Administered prior to any surgical or radiation procedures. It is recommended when tumours are too large to operate on or when the tumor's location makes surgery difficult. The drugs used in neoadjuvant chemotherapy shrink the tumour enough to allow surgery.
Administered following surgical or radiation procedures. It is recommended that any remaining cancer cells that are not visible in imaging tests be cleaned up. This treatment helps to reduce the likelihood of cancer recurrence.
Recommended to manage cancer symptoms.
Targeted therapy is an advanced cancer treatment that uses drugs to target specific proteins and genes found in cancer cells and related cells. These drugs help prevent cancer from spreading to other parts of the body.
Targeted therapy is classified into two types:
These drugs enter cancer cells, target proteins, and block signals for cell division and growth.
Lab-created antibodies similar to those produced by the immune system. They target and destroy proteins in cancer cells.