Chemotherapy
Sometimes doctors use the word cytotoxic to describe the way chemotherapy works. Cytotoxic means toxic to cells.
Whether chemotherapy is a suitable treatment for you, and which drugs you might have, depends on:
your type of cancer
what the cancer cells look like under a microscope
whether the cancer has spread
your general health
There are more than 100 different drugs currently available. New ones are being developed all the time.
You might have treatment with a single chemotherapy drug or a combination of drugs. The chemotherapy drugs you have depend on where in your body the cancer started (your type of cancer). This is because different drugs work on different types of cancer.
So the drugs you need for a cancer that started in the breast and has spread to the lung might be different to the drugs you would have for a cancer that started in the lung.
You might have chemotherapy on its own. Or you could have it with other treatments, such as:
radiotherapy
surgery
hormone therapy
targeted cancer drugs
immunotherapy
a combination of any of these treatments
You might also have high dose chemotherapy as part of a bone marrow or stem cell transplant.
Find out more about other cancer treatments
Drugs have a generic name and they might also have one or more brand names.
The generic name is the chemical name of the drug – for example, paracetamol
The brand or trade name is the name given to the drug by the company that makes it – such as Panadol or Calpol
Drugs might be made by more than one company and so may have more than one brand name. For some drugs the brand or trade name is the most commonly used name. For other drugs the generic name is the most often used.
You can ask your chemotherapy nurse, pharmacist or doctor to tell you the generic name and the brand names of the drug they’re using in your treatment.
Doctors often treat cancer with 2 or more chemotherapy drugs. Sometimes they also combine chemotherapy drugs with other medicines, such as steroids, immunotherapy or targeted cancer drugs.
The drug combinations they use often have a name that's made up from the first letters of the drug names. This type of made up word is called an acronym.
Some combination chemotherapy names are simple, like MIC:
M = mitomycin
I = ifosfamide
C = cisplatin
Not all acronyms are so obvious. One example is CHOP:
C = cyclophosphamide
H = doxorubicin
O = vincristine (Oncovin)
P = prednisolone, a steroid
Ask your doctor what each letter stands for. Ask them to write down the individual names of each drug in full. This will make it easier for you to find information about them.
Many cancer drug names begin with the same letter - and it’s important to be sure which drugs you’re having.
Last reviewed: 10 Nov 2023
Next review due: 10 Nov 2026
Whether you have chemotherapy as part of your treatment depends on what type of cancer you have, how big it is and whether it has spread or not.
People usually have chemotherapy either at home, in hospital or at a day clinic. There are different ways of having chemotherapy drugs. Your doctor will talk about the most suitable option for you.
Doctors plan a course of chemotherapy treatment for each individual person. The treatment plan might change from time to time.
Most chemotherapy side effects are temporary, but some people are affected months or years after treatment.
Search for the cancer type you want to find out about. Each section has detailed information about symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, research and coping with cancer.
Chemotherapy is a standard treatment for some types of cancer. It uses anti cancer drugs to destroy cancer cells.

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