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Cancer Chemotherapy in the Older Cancer Patient


Lodovico Balducci, MD, Professor of Oncology and Medicine, University of South Florida College of Medicine and H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute; Director, Division of Geriatric Oncology, Department of Interdisciplinary Oncology; Tampa, FL, USA.

The need for physicians to manage cancer in older patients is increasingly common. Cytotoxic chemotherapy for lymphoma, cancers of the breast, of the colorectum, and of the lung may be as effective in older individuals as in younger adults provided that patient selection is individualized on the basis of life expectancy and functional reserve rather than chronologic ages; the doses of chemotherapy are adjusted to the Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR); prophylactic filgrastim or pegfilgrastim are utilized to prevent neutropenic infections; and hemoglobin is maintained at 120gm/l.
Keywords: Cancer, aging, older adult, chemotherapy, toxicity.