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External Beam
Radiation Therapy Treatments
The goal of radiation therapy
is to get a high enough dose
of radiation into the body to
kill the cancer cells while
sparing the surrounding healthy
tissue from damage. Several
different radiation therapy
techniques have been developed
to accomplish this. Depending
on the location, size and type
of your tumor or tumors, you
may receive one or a combination
of these techniques. Your cancer
treatment team will work with
you to determine which treatment
and how much radiation is best
for you.
During external beam radiation
therapy, a beam of radiation
is directed through the skin
to a tumor and the immediate
surrounding area in order to
destroy the main tumor and any
nearby cancer cells. To minimize
side effects, the treatments
are typically given every day
for a number of weeks.
The radiation beam comes from
a machine located outside of
your body that does not touch
your skin or the tumor. Receiving
external beam radiation is similar
to having an X-ray taken. It
is a painless, bloodless procedure.
The most common type of machine
used to deliver external beam
radiation therapy is called
a linear accelerator, sometimes
called a “linac.” It produces
a beam of high-energy X-rays
or electrons. Using sophisticated
treatment planning software,
your radiation oncology treatment
team plans the size and shape
of the beam, as well as how
it is directed at your body,
to effectively treat your tumor
while sparing the normal tissue
surrounding the cancer cells.
Several special types of external
beam therapy are discussed below.
These are used for particular
types of cancer, and your radiation
oncologist will recommend one
of these treatments if he or
she believes it will help you.
Three-Dimensional Conformal
Radiation Therapy (3D-CRT)
Tumors usually have an irregular
shape. Three-dimensional conformal
radiation therapy (3D-CRT) uses
sophisticated computers and
computer assisted tomography
scans (CT or CAT scans) and/or
magnetic resonance imaging scans
(MR or MRI scans) to create
detailed, three-dimensional
representations of the tumor
and surrounding organs. Your
radiation oncologist can then
shape the radiation beams exactly
to the size and shape of your
tumor. The tools used to shape
the radiation beams are multileaf
collimators or blocks. Because
the radiation beams are very
precisely directed, nearby normal
tissue receives less radiation
exposure.
Intensity Modulated Radiation
Therapy (IMRT)
Intensity modulated radiation
therapy (IMRT) is a specialized
form of 3D-CRT that allows radiation
to be more exactly shaped to
fit your tumor. With IMRT, the
radiation beam can be broken
up into many “beamlets,” and
the intensity of each beamlet
can be adjusted individually.
Using IMRT, it may be possible
to further limit the exact amount
of radiation that is received
by normal tissues that are near
the tumor. In some situations,
this may also allow a higher
dose of radiation to be delivered
to the tumor, increasing the
chance of a cure.
Proton Beam Therapy
Similar to external beam therapy,
proton beam therapy is a form
of radiation treatment that
uses protons rather than X-rays
to treat certain types of cancer
and other diseases. The physical
characteristics of the proton
therapy beam allow doctors to
better focus the dose on the
tumor with the potential to
reduce the dose to nearby healthy
tissues.
Neutron Beam Therapy
Like proton therapy, neutron
beam therapy is a specialized
form of radiation therapy that
can be used to treat certain
tumors that are radioresistant,
meaning that they are very difficult
to kill using conventional radiation
therapy. Neutron therapy can
also be used to treat certain
inoperable tumors.
Stereotactic Radiotherapy
Stereotactic radiotherapy is
a technique that allows your
radiation oncologist to precisely
focus beams of radiation to
destroy certain types of tumors.
Since the beam is so precise,
your radiation oncologist may
be able to spare more normal
tissue than with conventional
external beam therapy. This
additional precision is achieved
through rigid immobilization,
such as with a head frame as
is used in the treatment of
brain tumors. Although often
performed in a single treatment,
fractionated radiotherapy, where
patients receive up to five
treatments, is sometimes necessary.
Stereotactic radiotherapy may
be the only treatment if a very
small area is affected. In addition
to treating tumors, it can also
be used to treat malformations
in the brain’s blood vessels
and certain noncancerous (benign)
brain tumors.
Image-Guided Radiation Therapy
(IGRT)
In some facilities, radiation
oncologists are using image-guided
radiation therapy (IGRT) to
help them better deliver the
radiation dose to the cancer.
Normal structures and tumors
can move between treatments
due to differences in organ
filling or movements while breathing.
IGRT is conformal radiation
treatment guided by imaging
equipment, such as CT, ultrasound
or stereoscopic X-rays, taken
in the treatment room just before
the patient is given the radiation
treatment. All patients first
undergo a CT scan as part of
the planning process. The digital
information from the CT scan
is then transmitted to console
in the treatment room to allow
doctors to compare the earlier
image with the images taken
just before treatment. During
IGRT, doctors “fuse” these images
to see if the treatment needs
to be changed. This allows doctors
to better target the cancer
while avoiding nearby healthy
tissue. In some cases, doctors
will implant a tiny piece of
material called a fiducial marker
near or in the tumor to help
them localize the tumor during
IGRT.
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