Medications
Your doctor may prescribe medicines that
will affect the growth of
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and relieve your symptoms.
Treatment depends on:
- The
stage
of the disease.
- The type of lymphoma. The kind of treatment
you have will depend on whether you have B-cell or T-cell lymphoma and whether
it is fast-growing or slow-growing.
- The size of the tumor and
whether it is greater than
10 cm (3.9 in.). It also
matters where the lymphoma is located and what organs are
involved.
- Your general health.
- Whether you have had
lymphoma in the past (recurrent disease). While lymphoma that has come back
(recurred) may be controlled, it often is not curable.
For more information about medication treatments, see the
following topics:
Medication Choices
Chemotherapy
often cures aggressive forms of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Even when cure is not
possible, such as with indolent lymphoma, chemotherapy may allow you to live a
long time without symptoms. A combination of chemotherapy medicines is
generally more effective than a single drug. The most commonly used combination
is called CHOP, which combines
cyclophosphamide,
doxorubicin,
vincristine, and
prednisone.
Your doctor may recommend
that you try treatment with a medicine known as a
monoclonal antibody (such as
rituximab). This medicine is used with CHOP for B-cell
lymphomas and helps you live a long time without symptoms.5
Other medicine combinations include:
What To Think About
Depending on the type and the
stage of the lymphoma, chemotherapy may be used alone
or in combination with
radiation therapy.
Sometimes a person may
take one chemotherapy combination for several cycles and later switch to a
different one if the first treatment combination does not seem to be
working.
Chemotherapy causes many side effects. These side effects
are usually temporary and go away when treatment is stopped. Your doctor may
prescribe
medicines to control nausea and vomiting from
chemotherapy. Older adults may find side effects more difficult to tolerate.
Side effects may also cause more problems if you have other diseases, such as
diabetes,
chronic lung disease, or
coronary artery disease. You may not be able to become
pregnant or father a child after chemotherapy treatment. Discuss fertility
issues with your doctor before starting treatment. Chemotherapy medicines can
also cause birth defects. If you are pregnant or wish to father a child,
discuss the risk of birth defects with your doctor before using any
chemotherapy medicine.
Survival rates have improved as a result of
clinical trials. Clinical trials provide evidence
about new medicines and treatments that may help people who have non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma live longer and have a better quality of life. If you are interested
in taking part in a clinical trial, check with your doctor to see if there are
any clinical trials available in your area.
Your doctor may use
the term "remission" instead of "cure" when talking about the effectiveness of
your treatment. Although many people with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma are
successfully treated, doctors use the term remission because cancer can return.
It is important to discuss the possibility of recurrence with your
doctor.