Doxorubicin, paraesthesia, scintigraphy… During breast cancer treatment, you will come across many new terms that a healthy person isn’t familiar with – unless working as a doctor. If your head is spinning from the number of them, here is a helpful glossary of the most common oncology terms.
Illustration: Kateřina Dubská @kater_illu
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Ablation – surgical removal of entire breast
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Alopecia – hair loss
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Cytostatics – drugs used to treat cancer, suppress the growth of tumorous cells
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Differentiation – indication of how mature tumorous cells are, a.k.a. grade
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Doxorubicin – cytostatic that is usually used as first treatment; due to its colour also called Aperol or orangeade
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Echocardiography – heart sonogram
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Axillary excision – surgical removal of lymph nodes from armpit
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Haematotoxicity – negative effect of chemotherapy on blood cells levels
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Histology – microscopic analysis of tissue sample removed from breast
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Holter/Holter monitoring – type of EKG for extended monitoring of heart activity
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Chemotherapy – oncological treatment using chemicals-cytostatics
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Immunohistochemistry – examination of tissue that shows presence of e.g. estrogen receptors
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Incidence – number of newly diagnosed oncological cases in selected population in one year
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Carcinogen – substance causing cancer
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Cardiotoxicity – heart damage due to using chemical substances
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Corticoids – substances with the same effect as adrenal cortex hormones
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Lumpectomy – removal of tumour and adjacent tissue; kind of breast-conserving surgery
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Mastectomy – surgical removal of breast; can be unilateral (one-sided) or bilateral (double-sided)
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Metastases – secondary locations of cancer cells outside the original site of tumour
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Mortality – death rate
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Neurotoxicity – nerve damage due to using chemical substances
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Neutropenia – lack of neutrophils in blood (neutrophils are type of leukocytes – white blood cells)
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Oncomarker – substance that is detectable at higher levels in blood in some tumours
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Paraesthesia – loss of sensation in certain body part(s), usually manifesting as tingling
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Radiotherapy – treatment using ionising radiation; used mostly after breast-conserving surgery
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Recurrence – return of disease after its real or alleged cure
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Remission – disappearance of all traits of disease; asymptomatic period
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Restaging examination – follow-up examinations, e.g. CT scan
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Bones scintigraphy – radioisotope bone scan to exclude metastatic spread
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Sentinel node – first lymph node from tumour in given direction
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Setron – anti-nausea drug
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Tamoxifen – drug used long-term as part of hormonal treatment
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Taxanes – group of cytostatics used during chemotherapy
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Thromboembolism – condition where blood clots form
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Zoladex – drug (in form of injections) used as an ovarian protection during chemotherapy and also as part of hormonal treatment