Targeted therapy is a cancer treatment that specifically targets a person’s cancer cells and the molecules which tell the cells to grow and spread.
By attacking these growth signals in the cancer cell, targeted therapies can block the abnormal growth of those cells which cause the cancer.
How is targeted therapy different to chemotherapy?
Targeted therapy targets and attacks cancer cells. Chemotherapy kills all rapidly-dividing cancer cells but also attacks the body’s fast-growing healthy cells (such as hair follicles, and cells lining the mouth, gastrointestinal tract and bone marrow).
Some targeted therapies are only available through clinical trials, and not all cancers respond effectively to this treatment. Depending on your cancer, targeted therapy may be used with, or instead of, other cancer treatments such as radiation therapy, chemotherapy or surgery.