Chart — Oncology
Cancer Treatment Modalities
All six major cancer treatment modalities compared — purpose, examples, advantages, limitations, and nursing considerations. Most patients receive multiple modalities in combination or sequence.
Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
| Modality | Purpose | Advantages | Limitations | Nursing Considerations |
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⚕Surgery Mastectomy, colectomy, nephrectomy, SLNB, Whipple procedure, oophorectomy | Curative removal of localized tumor; staging; debulking; palliative symptom relief |
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💊Chemotherapy Doxorubicin, cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, 5-FU, paclitaxel, methotrexate | Cytotoxic — kills rapidly dividing cancer cells; curative, neoadjuvant, adjuvant, or palliative intent |
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☢Radiation Therapy External beam (EBRT, IMRT, SBRT), brachytherapy (seed implants, tandem and ovoids), I-131 | Uses ionizing radiation to damage cancer cell DNA and prevent replication; curative, adjuvant, or palliative |
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🛡Immunotherapy Checkpoint inhibitors (pembrolizumab, nivolumab, ipilimumab), CAR-T, rituximab, trastuzumab (mAbs), IL-2, sipuleucel-T | Harnesses the patient's immune system to recognize and destroy cancer cells |
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🎯Targeted Therapy Imatinib (BCR-ABL), trastuzumab (HER2), erlotinib (EGFR), vemurafenib (BRAF), palbociclib (CDK4/6), olaparib (PARP) | Targets specific molecular pathways, proteins, or gene mutations driving cancer growth |
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⚡Hormonal Therapy Tamoxifen, anastrozole/letrozole/exemestane (AIs), leuprolide (LHRH agonist), bicalutamide/enzalutamide, fulvestrant | Blocks or reduces hormones that drive hormone-sensitive cancer growth (estrogen, testosterone) |
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NCLEX Quick Reference — Treatment Selection Clues
Localized solid tumor, good surgical candidate
→ Surgery (often first-line curative)
Post-surgery — reduce microscopic residual disease
→ Adjuvant chemotherapy or radiation
Tumor too large for resection — shrink first
→ Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (or radiation)
Metastatic hormone receptor-positive breast cancer
→ Hormonal therapy + CDK4/6 inhibitor (targeted)
Patient with new back pain + lymphoma diagnosis
→ Radiation ± chemotherapy (potential SCC — emergency eval)
HER2-positive breast cancer
→ Chemotherapy + trastuzumab (monitor ECHO)
CML with BCR-ABL mutation
→ Targeted therapy (imatinib — TKI)
External beam radiation — precautions needed?
→ No — patient is NOT radioactive
Combined Modality Sequencing
Neoadjuvant
Before surgery — shrink tumor
Adjuvant
After surgery — eradicate residual
Concurrent
Chemo + radiation simultaneously — synergy
Maintenance
Ongoing after remission to delay relapse
Related Resources
Source: ONS (Oncology Nursing Society) Core Curriculum; NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines; ACS Cancer Treatment Information.
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with ONS Core Curriculum; NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines; ACS Cancer Treatment Information. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
