Targeted Therapy for Cancer

Targeted therapy is cancer treatment that uses medicines to attack specific targets or processes of cancer cells. Unlike chemotherapy or radiation treatment, targeted therapy affects only the cancer cells and not the other cells in the body.

It may be used alone but often is combined with other cancer treatments such as standard chemotherapy.

Targeted therapy can stop cancer cells from growing or spreading. It does this by blocking cell signals. It can also kill cancer cells directly. Examples of agents used for targeted therapy include:

Cancer vaccines and gene therapy may be considered targeted therapies. They interfere with cancer cell growth.

Credits

By: Healthwise StaffLast Revised: June 28, 2011
Medical Review: Sarah Marshall, MD - Family Medicine
Douglas A. Stewart, MD - Medical Oncology

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