Radioactive iodine is
the most curative treatment for feline hyperthyroidism, but also can be the costliest.
Not exact matches
Glioblastoma is the
most aggressive type of tumor that originates in the brain and with no
curative treatments currently available, the average survival time for patients ranges from 15 to 18 months.
These new technologies,
most of which are in early stages of development, hold significant promise for transformative and potentially
curative treatments for some of humanity's
most troubling and intractable maladies.
Do date surgery is considered the
most definitive
treatment for early - stage melanoma, but it is rarely
curative for the advanced stages of melanomas [8].
Curative therapy, including chest RT for Hodgkin lymphoma, is associated with a definitively increased risk of breast cancer,
most often manifesting approximately 20 years after
treatment.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the leading cause of leukemia mortality in the United States.1
Curative treatment involves intensive induction chemotherapy, before proceeding to either consolidation chemotherapy or allogeneic stem cell transplantation based on the patient's risk for relapse.2 This approach has been employed for > 4 decades and, although
most individuals achieve complete remissions with front - line therapy, 3 the majority of patients ultimately relapse with drug - resistant disease, and overall survival rates remain disappointingly poor.4 The limited ability of many patients to tolerate the intense chemotherapy - based
treatments, in particular hematological toxicity, further contributes to the poor outcomes noted in this disease.
Treatment is not
curative, however, and
most affected individuals eventually die from the disease.
Each approach has its pros and cons, but the consensus among veterinarians is that I - 131 therapy is the
curative treatment of choice for
most hyperthyroid cats.
It has the advantage of being
curative in
most cases with no ongoing
treatment.
Canine osteosarcoma is the
most frequent malignant disease in large dogs, with over 8000 cases in the United States annually, and there is no
curative treatment.
Most histiocytomas regress spontaneously without
treatment; however, surgical excision is usually
curative.
If the disease is suspected or diagnosed,
treatment with antibiotics is
curative in
most cases.