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   Table of Contents
  • What Is Leukemia?
  • Normal/Leukemia Cells
  • Types of Leukemia
  • Leukemia Symptoms
  • Diagnosis of Leukemia
  • Leukemia Treatment
  • Getting a Second Opinion
  • Methods of Leukemia Treatment
  • Leukemia Clinical Trials
  • Supportive Care
  • Side Effects of Leukemia Treatment
  • Leukemia Treatment with Chemotherapy
  • Leukemia Treatment with Radiation Therapy
  • Leukemia Treatment with Bone Marrow Transplants
  • Nutrition for Leukemia Cancer Patients
  • Followup Care
  • Support for Leukemia Patients
  • What the Future Holds
  • Possible Causes of Leukemia
  • Keeping on Top of Your Condition
  •      

    What the Future Holds



    Search our Archive for the Latest News on Leukemia

    Researchers are finding better ways to treat leukemia, and the chances of recovery keep improving. Still, it is natural for patients and their families to be concerned about the future.

    Sometimes people use rates of survival and other statistics to try to figure out whether a patient will be cured or how long the patient will live. It is important to remember, however, that statistics are averages based on large numbers of patients. They cannot be used to predict what will happen to a certain patient because no two patients are alike; treatments and responses vary greatly. The doctor who takes care of the patient is in the best position to discuss the chance of recovery (prognosis). Patients and their families should feel free to ask the doctor about the prognosis, but they should keep in mind that not even the doctor knows exactly what will happen. Doctors often talk about surviving cancer, or they may use the term remission, rather than cure. Even though many leukemia patients are cured, doctors use these terms because the disease can recur.




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