Cancer is the second most common cause of death in India. Most common cancers affecting the population in the country include breast cancer, lung cancer, oral cancer, gastric cancer, and cervical cancer.
There are 27 government recognized cancer centers under the National Cancer Control Programme. In 2010, the central government launched a comprehensive National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases & Stroke (NPCDCS), which spans several districts across 21 states in the county.
In a bid to offer uniform, quality treatment for patients across India, Mumbai’s Tata Memorial Hospital recently established a national cancer grid, which will link all the existing and proposed cancer centers.
Cancer is not a single disease, but a collection of more than a hundred diseases, developed due to the abnormal growth of cells in the body. Even tumors, masses of tissues formed by this growth, that arise from the same cell-type can be different. Individual cancers are made up of multiple clones of the same cancer cells under varying degrees of selective pressure to become more invasive and deadly.
There are many common characteristics of the different types of cancers. They evade the surrounding tissue for healthy blood supply and the immune system to protect themselves. They also invade the blood and lymphatic systems to travel to other parts of the body like the liver, lungs, and bones. Earlier detection can help save lives. Screening mechanisms generally detect slower growing and more indolent cancers, which are characteristically less malignant and may not progress to endanger the patient’s life, whereas, malignant tumors can be identified between screenings.
There are many cancer treatment options available for different types of the disease. A patient’s treatment plan depends on the type, stage, and grade of cancer they have. It is not uncommon for patients to go through multiple treatment combinations.
When spotted early, tumors tend to be smaller, and they are easier to remove surgically or more likely to shrink after chemotherapy or radiation therapy. For instance, some types of lymphoma and leukemia can be treated with chemotherapy and radiation, while other tumors like breast and colorectal cancers are curable with surgery and chemoradiation. This article explores treatments available in India for cancers that are curable.
Following are the options currently available for cancer treatment in India:
- Surgery: A procedure when a surgeon removes tumors from the body.
- Radiation therapy: Radiotherapy uses high doses of radiation focused on the affected sites to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors.
- Chemotherapy: This uses drugs and pharmaceuticals to kill cancer cells.
- Immunotherapy: This stimulates the immune system to fight cancer.
- Hormone therapy: This is used to kill the growth of breast and prostate cancers that feed on hormones to grow.
- Stem-cell transplants: These are procedures that restore blood-forming stem cells in patients who have theirs destroyed by massive doses of chemotherapy and radiation.
- Precision medicine: Doctors use this based on their genetic understanding of the disease.
- Targeted therapy: This is a treatment that attacks cancer cells that grow and spread using targeted drugs.