Yet, experienced oncologists have a word of caution. Many promising discoveries have only led to replapses, sometimes after years. “I have used immunotherapy on three patients and it has worked very well in two,” says Dr Harit Chaturvedi, chairman, cancer care, Max Hospitals. He warns against getting carried away and thinking of these as magic bullets. “I personally feel we should be open to these advancements, but 95 per cent of cancers are still treated the traditional way in India,” he says. Why? For one, genetic tests may at this stage add value to only 2-3 per cent of the cases, he says. Immunotherapy, for instance, has no role yet in head and neck cancer. Costs are also a prohibitive factor, though with some heartening variations. When it comes to new therapies, few people can afford many of these. “If immunotherapy works, a patient will need it all his life. The costs work out to at least Rs 1-1.5 lakh a month,” Dr Chaturvedi says.