Ever-Better Cancer Treatment Therapies

Medically reviewed by
Dr. Ravneet Bajwa
McLeod Oncology and Hematology Associates

A cancer diagnosis never represents good news. Yet, with advances in diagnosis and treatment, many cancers are treated more like chronic conditions, such as diabetes, than the acute catastrophic cancers of the past.

“While people will still develop cancer, the outlook for treating and controlling or even curing it has never been so bright,” says McLeod Oncologist Dr. Ravneet Bajwa. “To understand how far we’ve come, it’s enlightening to look back at the history of cancer treatments.”

1882.  The first radical mastectomy to remove breast cancer was performed. Overtime less invasive procedures were found to be equally effective.

1891.  In an early attempt at immunotherapy, toxins from a skin infection triggered the body’s immune system to fight rare connective tissue sarcomas. However, it was not until 1958 that chemotherapy successfully treated uterine sarcoma.

1898.  The discovery of radium leads to the first cancer treated with radiation therapy just before the close of the 19th century. In 1903, two patients treated with radium saw their skin cancer eliminated.

1904. Surgeons first successfully removed a cancerous prostate, followed two years later by the first removal of a cancerous uterus (radical hysterectomy) and a few years later by successful cancer surgery on a lung (lobectomy).

1918. External beam radiation was first utilized to treat chest, brain and abdomen cancers.

1928. George Papanicolaou developed the “Pap” test, which physicians still use today to detect cervical cancer.

1946. Chemicals from mustard gas, used in World War I chemical warfare, could be used to treat certain cancers.

1948.  Researchers first reported leukemia remission in children.

1960s. Researchers confirmed that therapies given in addition to the primary treatment improved the ultimate outcome. So-called adjuvant therapy generally describes the use of radiation or chemotherapy given before surgery.

1978.  Tamoxifen is approved for breast cancer treatment.

1982. A  patient with lymphoma (cancer which begins in the immune system) improved after treatment with monoclonal antibodies, lab-produced components that can “unlock” the immune system so it can destroy the tumor.

1990. The last decade of the 20th century saw advances in targeted therapy, where specific cells are targeted with chemotherapy.

1994. Mutations of the BRCA1 gene are confirmed as increasing the risk of breast and ovarian cancers.

In the 21st century, we’ve witnessed a stream of developments:

  • 2001. The FDA approves Gleevec for treating chronic myeloid leukemia.
  • 2006. National Cancer Institute research demonstrates that Tamoxifen and Raloxifene reduce the risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women. Also that year, a vaccine for the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV), which causes cervical cancer, received approval.
  • 2009. Stereotactic RadioSurgery (SRS) reduces metastatic brain cancer treatment to a single day of high dose radiation treatment.
  • 2010. A cancer treatment vaccine made from the patient’s own immune system cells receives FDA approval to treat metastatic prostate cancer.
  • 2011.  A monoclonal antibody gains approval for use in treating inoperable skin cancer.
  • 2014. Immunotherapy for liver, lung and skin cancer garners FDA approval.
  • 2015. A New class of breast cancer treatment introduced.
  • 2016. First new treatment for bladder treatment in 3 decades.
  • 2017.  First gene therapy for cancer.
  • 2018. Treatment targets BRCA mutations in breast cancer.
  • 2019. FDA approves combination and chemotherapy free treatments improving patient survival with non-Hodgkin Lymphoma.

AND MORE TO COME
Each discovery, clinical trial or approval generates more hope for successful prevention, diagnosis or treatment that results in more cancer survivors.

Have a question?  Ask a Cancer Specialist.

Sources include:  McLeod Health, National Institutes of Health, Scientific American, National Cancer Institute