The treatments for bone cancer depend on a couple of factors, such as:
- Size of the tumor
- Extent to which the tumor has grown
- The patient’s age and overall health status
Bone tumors may be treated with surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, targeted therapy or a combination of these.
Surgery – In this type of bone cancer treatment, the tumor is surgically removed. In very rare cases, the limb may need to be amputated. The treatment also includes radiation and chemotherapy before the surgery to shrink the cancerous tumor and post surgery to kill the remaining cancer cells, if any.
Radiation Therapy– Radiation is highly effective at shrinking tumors and killing cancer cells. Radiation therapy is strong like X-rays and is typically provided before and after surgical procedures.
Chemotherapy – The drugs are passed into the blood stream to stop the growth of cancer cells. These are really strong doses of medicine, which have advanced greatly through research over the years.
Targeted Therapy – This is a very new bone cancer treatment option. The cancer cells in this therapy are targeted individually and destroyed through a combination of drugs as well as radiation, which affect the cancer cell molecules and stop the process of uncontrollable multiplication.