Head and Neck Cancer Chemotherapy in Nigeria
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Date
2019
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Otorhinolaryngological Society of Nigeria
Abstract
Chemotherapy is defined as the use of one or more chemical compounds in treatment of neoplastic diseases to destroy offending cancer cells without demanding the host. Chemotherapeutic agents (also known as cytotoxic drugs) can be used to cure cancer, lessen the chance of the cancer to return, stop or slow down its growth. The place of chemotherapy in head and neck cancer continues to evolve and broaden over the last two decades. Since the advent of platinum-based chemotherapeutic agents in the late 20th century, the role of chemotherapy has gradually evolved from producing short-lived local responses in the palliative setting to the widely used curative multimodality regimes for advanced head and neck cancers. The palliative care component of head and neck cancer control with chemotherapy needs further emphasis in Nigeria because many of our cancer patients have no hope of cure as they present to hospital late, which makes the disease far advanced at presentation
Description
Keywords
Head and neck cancer, Chemotherapy, Nigeria, Pharmaceutical care
Citation
Ologe, M. O., Ayodele, O., & Ologe, F. E. (2019). Head and neck cancer chemotherapy in Nigeria. Nigerian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology, 16(2), 36 – 40.