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Overview. Chemotherapy is a drug treatment that uses powerful chemicals to kill fast-growing cells in your body. Chemotherapy is most often used to treat cancer, since cancer cells grow and multiply much more quickly than most cells in the body. Many different chemotherapy drugs are available.
Complete response - all of the cancer or tumor disappears; there is no evidence of disease. A tumor marker (if applicable) may fall within the normal range. Partial response - the cancer has shrunk by a percentage but disease remains. A tumor marker (if applicable) may have fallen but evidence of disease remains.
Monitoring during chemotherapy You will have regular blood tests to check the level of blood cells throughout the course of treatment. You may have a complete blood count (CBC) or other tests before each chemotherapy treatment. A drop in blood cell counts shows that the chemotherapy drugs are working.
You will often receive chemo in sessions where you have treatment for several weeks, followed by a few weeks off before resuming. Your tumor may start to shrink after one round, but it can also take months. Your oncologist will have a personal discussion with you about how long they think results might take.
Normally, three or four days after chemo, your symptoms will get better. Most side effects last just for the duration of your chemotherapy treatment. However, some side effects, such as fatigue, neuropathy, hair loss and heart damage, can last a lifetime. But thats rare, says Iheme.
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Tests to determine if chemo is effective include blood tests, CT scans, and MRIs. In some instances, doctors order more than one test to assess chemos effectiveness. A doctor may classify the response to chemo as a complete response, partial response, stable, or disease progression.

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