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Understanding Cancer & Cancer Treatments

Understanding your diagnosis, treatment options and recovery journey

A cancer diagnosis often introduces a completely new vocabulary and many unfamiliar treatments.

Patients and families are frequently asked to make important decisions while trying to understand complex medical information. Terms such as chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, radiotherapy and hormonal therapy can feel overwhelming, particularly at a time when emotional and physical demands are already high.

The aim of this section is to provide clear, accessible information about cancer, the treatments used in modern oncology, and some of the common challenges people may experience during and after treatment.

Understanding what is happening, why treatments work and why side effects occur can help patients feel more informed, confident and prepared throughout their cancer journey.

What Is Cancer?

Cancer is not a single disease but a group of conditions that share a common characteristic: cells begin to grow and divide in an uncontrolled way.

Under normal circumstances, the body carefully regulates how cells grow, repair themselves and eventually die. This process allows tissues and organs to function normally throughout life.

Cancer develops when changes occur within the genetic material (DNA) of a cell. Over time, these changes can allow cells to ignore the normal signals that regulate growth and repair.

As these abnormal cells continue to multiply, they may form a tumour or spread to other parts of the body.

Why Does Cancer Develop?

Cancer usually develops through a combination of factors.

These may include:

• Ageing

• Genetic predisposition

• Smoking

• Alcohol

• Environmental exposures

• Chronic inflammation

• Viral infections

• Random genetic changes that accumulate over time

In most cases, cancer develops over many years rather than appearing suddenly.

Benign and Malignant Tumours

Not all tumours are cancerous.

Benign tumours

Benign tumours remain localised and do not spread to other parts of the body.

Malignant tumours

Malignant tumours have the ability to invade surrounding tissues and may spread to distant organs through a process called metastasis.

It is this ability to spread that makes cancer potentially life-threatening.

What Is Metastasis?

Metastasis occurs when cancer cells leave the original tumour and travel through the bloodstream or lymphatic system to establish new tumours elsewhere in the body.

For example:

  • Breast cancer may spread to bone, liver or lungs.

  • Prostate cancer commonly spreads to bone.

  • Colorectal cancer may spread to the liver.

Modern cancer treatments are often designed not only to treat the primary tumour but also to prevent or control metastatic disease.

Why Are There Different Cancer Treatments?

Cancer is extremely complex.

Different cancers behave differently, grow at different rates and respond differently to treatment.

For this reason, modern oncology uses a range of treatment approaches.

Each treatment has specific strengths, limitations and potential side effects.

Main Types of Cancer Treatment

Surgery

Removal of cancerous tissue.

Often used when the cancer is localised.

Radiotherapy

Uses targeted radiation to damage cancer cells and prevent them from reproducing.

Chemotherapy

Uses medicines that target rapidly dividing cancer cells.

Hormonal Therapy

Used for cancers that depend on hormones to grow, such as some breast and prostate cancers.

Targeted Therapies

Designed to block specific molecular pathways used by cancer cells.

Immunotherapy

Helps the immune system recognise and attack cancer cells.

Antibody-Based Therapies

Use specially designed antibodies to target cancer cells with great precision.

CAR-T Cell Therapy

Uses the patient's own immune cells, genetically modified to recognise and attack cancer.

Why Do Side Effects Occur?

Many cancer treatments work by damaging cancer cells.

However, healthy tissues may sometimes be affected as well.

This can lead to treatment-related side effects.

The type and severity of side effects varies considerably according to:

• The treatment received

• The dosage used

• The duration of treatment

• The individual's overall health

• Personal biological factors

 

Not everyone experiences the same challenges.

Common Treatment-Related Challenges

Many patients experience some combination of:

Cancer-related fatigue

Persistent exhaustion that is not fully relieved by rest.

Cognitive difficulties ("Chemo Brain")

Problems with concentration, memory, mental clarity and processing speed.

Peripheral neuropathy

Changes in sensation affecting hands and feet.

Sleep difficulties

Problems falling asleep, staying asleep or achieving restorative sleep.

Digestive symptoms

Changes in appetite, nausea, bowel function and digestion.

Mucositis

Inflammation or ulceration of the mouth and digestive tract.

Skin and nail changes

Particularly during certain chemotherapy and targeted therapy treatments.

Emotional disadaptation

Managing uncertainty, stress and the practical consequences of treatment.

Supportive Care During Cancer Treatment

Modern cancer care increasingly recognises that quality of life matters alongside treatment outcomes.

Supportive care aims to help individuals:

• Maintain function

• Improve comfort

• Strengthen resilience

• Manage treatment-related challenges

• Support recovery

• Adapt to life during and after treatment

 

Supportive care works alongside conventional oncology treatment and does not replace it.

How Rowan Health Supports Patients

At Rowan Health, supportive care is organised around personalised support protocols rather than standardised treatment packages. These protocols are developed according to the individual's diagnosis, treatment pathway, anticipated side effects, current symptoms and recovery goals.

Step 1 – Understanding the Treatment Pathway

We begin by understanding where each person is in their cancer journey.

This may include:

  • Surgery

  • Chemotherapy

  • Radiotherapy

  • Hormonal therapy

  • Targeted therapy

  • Immunotherapy

  • Antibody-based therapies

  • CAR-T cell therapy

 

Different treatments are associated with different challenges and recovery needs. A patient receiving oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy may face very different difficulties from someone receiving endocrine therapy after breast cancer treatment or recovering from CAR-T therapy.

Step 2 – Identifying Areas of Vulnerability

We then assess the factors most likely to affect quality of life, function and recovery.

These may include:

  • Fatigue

  • Neuropathy

  • Cognitive difficulties ("chemo brain")

  • Sleep disruption

  • Digestive symptoms

  • Mucositis

  • Pain

  • Reduced physical function

  • Emotional wellbeing

Our aim is to anticipate challenges before they become established whenever possible.

 

Step 3 – Building a Personalised Support Protocol

Based on this assessment, we develop a structured support plan tailored to the individual's needs and stage of treatment.

​Depending on the individual's needs, the protocol may combine symptom management, rehabilitation, recovery support, education, self-management strategies and selected therapeutic interventions.

This may include:

  • Rehabilitation and manual therapy

  • Acupuncture

  • Neuro-coaching

  • Lifestyle and recovery support

  • Medical homeopathy

  • Herbal medicine

  • Fatigue-management strategies

  • Sleep support

  • Education and self-management tools

  • Survivorship planning

The emphasis is always on selecting the right combination of support for the right person at the right time.

Step 4 – Monitoring, Adapting and Supporting Recovery

Cancer treatment and recovery are dynamic processes.

Protocols are regularly reviewed and adapted as treatment progresses, symptoms change and recovery priorities evolve. The support required during active chemotherapy may differ significantly from that needed during rehabilitation, return to work or long-term survivorship.

Protocols are designed collaboratively with the patient and evolve throughout treatment and recovery.

 

Our Goal

Our objective is not simply to respond to symptoms as they arise.

It is to provide proactive, coordinated support that helps individuals:

  • Maintain function and independence

  • Strengthen resilience

  • Reduce the burden associated with treatment

  • Improve quality of life

  • Facilitate recovery and rehabilitation

  • Navigate survivorship with confidence

By understanding the treatment pathway, anticipating likely challenges and adapting support over time, we aim to help patients navigate treatment and recovery as successfully as possible.

Understanding Treatment, Recovery and Support

Explore our detailed guides:

​​

Cancer Treatments

Understanding Chemotherapy

Understanding Radiotherapy

Understanding Immunotherapy

Understanding Hormonal Therapy

Understanding Targeted Therapies

Understanding Antibody Therapies

Understanding CAR-T Cell Therapy

Treatment challenges

➡ Why Side Effects Happen

➡ Cancer-Related Fatigue

➡ Chemo Brain

➡ Peripheral Neuropathy

➡ Xerostomia (Dry Mouth)

➡ Mucositis

➡ Skin and Nail Changes During Cancer Treatment

➡ Sleep Difficulties

Recovery & Support

Cancer Support & Survivorship

➡ Carers' Wellbeing

➡ Supporting Recovery After Treatment

Need Support?

Every cancer journey is different.

If you would like to discuss how Rowan Health may support you or a family member during treatment or recovery, we would be happy to arrange an initial conversation.

Book a Free 10-Minute Discovery Call

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Rowan Health Ltd  |  Company number SC700025  |  Registered in Scotland

©2021 by Rowan Health Ltd                   RGPD

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