Targeted Therapy

It is a treatment that aims to study defective genes or proteins that contribute to the growth and development of cancer.

Traditional chemotherapy drugs, on the other hand, act against all dividing cells.

Targeted cancer therapies that have been approved for use against specific cancers include substances that block cell growth signalling, interfere with blood vessel formation in tumours, promote cancer cell death, stimulate the immune system to destroy cancer cells, and deliver toxic drugs to cancer cells.

Types of targeted therapies:

  1. MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY: targeted therapy aimed at receptors found on the outside of the cell.
  2. IMMUNOTHERAPY: targeted therapy focused on the internal components and functioning of cancer cells, causing their death. Boosts the immune system to destroy cancer cells.
  3. ANTI-ANGIOGENIC: blocks the growth of new blood vessels for tumours (a process called tumour angiogenesis). Anti-angiogenesis consists of interrupting the formation of new blood vessels.
  4. HORMONE THERAPY: slows or stops the growth of hormone-sensitive tumours, which require certain hormones to grow (breast and prostate).

CANCER VACCINES and GENE THERAPY are sometimes considered targeted therapies because they interfere with the growth of specific cancer cells.