This is a historical timeline of the development and progress of cancer treatments, which includes time of discovery, progress, and approval of the treatments.
Ancient Era
Cancer was traditionally treated with surgery, heat, or herbal (chemical) therapies.
2600 BC – Egyptian physician Imhotep diagnosed several types of tumour and therapies for them. According to the Ebers medical papyrus, hard tumours were treated by placing a poultice near the tumour, followed by local incision.[1]
BC – Ancient Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians used heat to treat masses. Healers in ancient India used regional and whole-body hyperthermia as treatments.[2]
2 AD – Ancient Greeks describe surgical treatment of cancer.[3][4]
1896 – French Dr. Victor Despeignes, "the father of radiation therapy", starts to use X-rays to treat cancer[8]
1896 – American Dr. Emil Grubbe starts to treat breast cancer patients with X-rays[4]
1896 Sir George Thomas Beatson invented hormonal treatment of breast cancer by bilateral ovary removal in women with inoperable breast cancer.
1900s
1900 – Swedish Dr. Stenbeck cures a skin cancer with small doses of radiation[4]
1920s – Dr. William B. Coley's immunotherapy treatment, regressed tumors in hundreds of cases, the success of Coley's Toxins attracted heavy resistance from his rival and supervisor, Dr. James Ewing, who was an ardent supporter of radiation therapy for cancer. This rivalry and opposition to Dr. Coley leads to the disuse of immunotherapy for cancer, in favor of Dr. Ewing's preferred radiation therapy[9]
1939 – American Dr. Charles Huggins uses synthetic hormone therapy to treat prostate cancer[10]
1942 – First chemotherapy drug mustine used to treat cancer[11]
1966 – Taxol, anti-cancer compound, isolated from the yew plant
1967 – Camptothecin, anti-cancer compound, isolated from the Camptotheca acuminata, the Chinese Happy Tree, which was used as a cancer treatment in traditional Chinese medicine.[23] It is the source of chemotherapy drugs: topotecan and irinotecan.
1997 – Chinese doctors start treating uterine fibroids, liver cancer, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, bone tumours, and renal cancer with ultrasound imaging-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound[35]
1998 – Chinese doctors start treating breast, kidney, lung, liver, prostate and bone cancer with imaging-guided cryoablation[36][37]
^Gian F. Baronzio (2006). "Introduction". Hyperthermia In Cancer Treatment: A Primer. Medical Intelligence Unit. Berlin: Springer. ISBN978-0-387-33440-0.[page needed]
^Goldman (1966). "A review: Applications of the laser beam in cancer biology". International Journal of Cancer. 1 (4): 309–318. doi:10.1002/ijc.2910010402. S2CID72256690.
^Muceniece A.J., Bumbieris J.V. 1982. Transplantation antigens and their changes in carcinogenesis and viral infection. In: Virusnyi onkoliz i iskusstvennaya geterogenizatsiya opukholei (Viral Oncolysis and Artificial Heterogenization of Tumors). Riga, pp. 217–234.
^the stem bark of Mappia foetida, a tree native to India, has proved to be another source significant for the isolation of camptothecin. TR Govindachari and N. Viswnathan, Phytochemistry 11(12), 3529-31 (1972). Efferth T, Fu YJ, Zu YG, Schwarz G, Konkimalla VS, Wink M (2007). "Molecular target-guided tumor therapy with natural products derived from traditional Chinese medicine". Current Medicinal Chemistry. 14 (19): 2024–32. doi:10.2174/092986707781368441. PMID17691944.
^Tamoxifen was born into a world of indifference in the '60s, when the focus of the research was on contraception. It grew up in the 70s, in a world where chemotherapy was king and hormonal therapies were perceived as non-starters in the quest to cure cancer.Jordan, V Craig (2000). "Tamoxifen: a personal retrospective"(PDF). The Lancet Oncology. 1 (1): 43–49. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(00)00009-7. PMID11905688.
^Huang, Z (2006). "Photodynamic therapy in China: Over 25 years of unique clinical experience: Part One—History and domestic photosensitizers". Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy. 3 (1): 3–10. doi:10.1016/S1572-1000(06)00009-3. PMID25049020.
Xu, DY (2007). "Research and development of photodynamic therapy photosensitizers in China". Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy. 4 (1): 13–25. doi:10.1016/j.pdpdt.2006.09.003. PMID25047186.
^In 1997, a patient with osteosarcoma was first successfully treated with ultrasound imaging-guided HIFU in Chongqing, China. Over the last decade, thousands of patients with uterine fibroids, liver cancer, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, bone tumors, and renal cancer have been treated with ultrasound imaging-guided HIFU. Based on several research groups’ reports, as well as our ten-year clinical experience, we conclude that this technique is safe and effective in treating human solid tumors.Zhang, Lian; Wang, Zhi-Biao (2010). "High-intensity focused ultrasound tumor ablation: Review of ten years of clinical experience". Frontiers of Medicine in China. 4 (3): 294–302. doi:10.1007/s11684-010-0092-8. PMID21191835. S2CID21219521.
^Vázquez, A.M, Hernández, A.M., Macías, A., et al. (2012). Racotumomab: an anti-idiotype vaccine related to N-glycolyl-containing gangliosides – preclinical and clinical data. Front Oncol. 2012;2:150.