In its common use, the term
chemotherapy refers to drugs for treating cancer. However, the larger definition of chemotherapy is:
"the use of chemical agents in the treatment or control of disease or mental illness."
Hence, any drug (chemical agent) used to treat any disease is really chemotherapy. It doesn't have to mean that you'll be poisoned by terribly aggressive drugs.
In fact, the one study mentioned here from Ohio and childlab uses a drug that is very much the same as Celebrex without the COX-2 inhibitors. "OSU-03012 is a recently licensed (AR-12; Arno Therapeutics, Inc.) novel derivative of the cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor celecoxib (Celebrexâ„¢), but devoid of COX-2 inhibitory activity."
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2692816/. I consider, the herb, that is now being sold as a drug, Boswellia, that I am taking to be chemotherapy. No noted side effects.
Celebrex itself has also been used in research on benign brain tumors.
Connie