The Sun (Malaysia)

What do we know about Kate’s ‘preventati­ve’ chemothera­py?

O Treatment given after surgery, called adjuvant therapy, can ‘mop up’ any remaining cancer cells

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AFTER weeks of public speculatio­n about the health of Britain’s Princess of Wales, Kate on Friday said in a video that she is receiving “preventati­ve” chemothera­py after an abdominal surgery in January revealed cancer.

Kate did not give details of the type or stage of cancer, or share her specific treatment plan, making it difficult to assess the potential impacts on her health.

Here is what we know about preventati­ve chemothera­py:

What is preventive chemothera­py?

Preventati­ve chemothera­py is given before or after a primary treatment, such as surgery, to reduce the chance of a cancer returning or spreading.

Preventati­ve treatments given before the primary treatment are called neoadjuvan­t therapy. Preventati­ve treatments given afterward, as in Kate’s case, are called adjuvant therapy.

Adjuvant chemothera­py can “mop up” any remaining cancer cells, but its value varies by cancer type and by its size and location, said Professor Bob Phillips, a paediatric oncologist at the University of York.

Later, patients may go on to receive maintenanc­e therapy to prevent the cancer’s return or to delay its growth.

What do treatment and recovery look like?

Oncologist­s today view cancer as an array of diseases, each of which requires its own specific treatment plan with a range of therapies, including intravenou­s infusions, pills, or radiation. Treatment can span a few months to over a year.

“There are a very

large number of chemothera­py drugs and combinatio­ns resulting in many different regimens, even for a single type of cancer,” said Dr Mangesh Thorat, a breast surgeon at Homerton University Hospital.

Typically, “patients receive four to six cycles, each lasting 21 days and consisting of a day or few days of chemo, then time for the body to recover from it,” Phillips said.

In other cases, chemothera­py is administer­ed daily, or every two or four weeks, he noted.

Recovery times vary widely, but even when treatment comes to an end, it can take months for a patient to resume full activity.

Does age matter?

Younger patients tend to be healthier when diagnosed and are therefore more likely to withstand the optimal doses of chemothera­py drugs given at ideal intervals, Phillips said.

“We are seeing more and more people in their 40s with cancer,” said Professor Andrew

Beggs, a colorectal surgeon at the University of Birmingham.

“Young people ... better tolerate higher doses of chemothera­py and so can be given stronger regimens that are more likely to kill any leftover cells,” Beggs added.

According to a 2023 study of 204 countries published in BMJ Oncology, the number of cancer cases in people under the age of 50 totaled 3.26 million in 2019, an increase of 79.1% since 1990, with “notable variances” in death rates between areas, countries, sex and cancer types.

A separate 2023 study published in Jama Network Open reported that in the US from 2010 to 2019, gastrointe­stinal cancers had the fastest-growing incidence rates among all earlyonset cancer groups, with a particular focus on cancers in the appendix, liver bile duct, and pancreas.

Colon cancers and breast cancers have also been increasing­ly diagnosed in younger patients, studies have shown. - Reuters

 ?? AFPPIC ?? A woman watches a recording of Britain’s Catherine, Princess of Wales, announcing her cancer diagnosis. Kate announced that she was in the early stages of chemothera­py. –
AFPPIC A woman watches a recording of Britain’s Catherine, Princess of Wales, announcing her cancer diagnosis. Kate announced that she was in the early stages of chemothera­py. –

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