Glossary

Chemotherapy: Treatment that kills or slows the growth of cancer cells.

Clinical study: Evaluates the effectiveness of a medicine; also called a clinical trial.

Complete response: Complete disappearance of all tumors as a result of treatment.

Immunotherapy: Treatment that boosts the body's natural immune defenses against cancer.

Interleukin-2 (IL-2): Natural protein in the body that plays an important role in activating immune system cells that can attack and destroy cancerous tumors. IL-2 is also another name for Proleukin®, a medicine that acts like natural IL-2.

Malignant: Cancerous; destructive cells that can harm tissues and organs.

Melanoma: Cancer that originates in pigment cells called melanocytes, which are found mainly in the skin but are also in other parts of the body, such as the eyes and mouth.

Metastasis: When cancer cells spread from where they started (the primary tumor) to other places in the body.

Partial response: Significant tumor shrinkage or a decrease in the amount of cancer in the body as a result of treatment.

Primary tumor: Original tumor; where cancer started.

Progression: When cancer gets worse or spreads to other places in the body.

Stage: Extent of cancer as determined by tumor size and where/how far cancer has spread in the body.

Targeted therapy: Treatment that targets specific cancer cells or some of the mechanisms that cause them to grow.

Tumor: Abnormal buildup of cells forming a mass of tissue; caused by cells that multiply when they shouldn't and/or continue to live past their normal life cycle; tumors may be benign (not cancerous) or malignant.