Chemotherapy medicines attack and kill cells that divide quickly, including cancer cells. These medicines can also affect normal cells that grow quickly. These include hair cells, cells that line your mouth and throat, and bone marrow cells where your new blood cells are made. Chemo side effects are different for everyone. They usually go away over time after treatment ends.
High doses of chemo are used for AML. This can sometimes lead to serious side effects.
The most common short-term side effects of chemo for AML include:
- Hair loss
- Infections from low levels of white blood cells
- Easy bruising or bleeding from low levels of platelets in your blood
- Tiredness from having low levels of red blood cells
- Mouth sores
- Loss of appetite
- Nausea and vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Skin and nail changes
- Inflammation of the membrane covering the eye and lining the eyelid (conjunctivitis)
- Numbness, tingling, or pain in the hands or feet (peripheral neuropathy)
Some side effects may not go away after treatment. The risk depends on the medicines used. For instance, some types of chemo damage the kidneys, liver, testicles, ovaries, brain, heart, or lungs. Doctors try to limit this damage by doing tests to closely watch the way your body responds to chemo. Some medicines cause problems having children in the future (fertility problems), or they can raise your risk of having other kinds of cancer later on. These risks need to be weighed against the benefits these medicines provide in treating your AML.
Be sure to tell your health care team about all side effects you have. There may be things you can do to manage or prevent side effects.