Radiation Therapy: Types and Side Effects
Radiation Therapy: Types and Side Effects
What are the main categories of radiation therapy
based on delivery method?
External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and internal radiation therapy (brachytherapy
·
External Beam Radiation Therapy (EBRT):
- In this method, the radiation
source is outside the patient's body.
- A machine, such as a linear
accelerator, directs high-energy beams of radiation towards the cancerous
tumor from various angles.
- EBRT is a local treatment,
meaning it targets a specific area of the body where the cancer is
located. For instance, if someone has lung cancer, the radiation will be
directed at their chest.
- This is the most common type of
radiation therapy used to treat many different kinds of cancer.
- Patients typically receive EBRT
in outpatient sessions over several weeks. The treatments are usually
painless and last only a few minutes, although the setup time might be
longer.
·
Internal Radiation Therapy (Brachytherapy):
- Also known as brachytherapy or
"seed implantation," this method involves placing a radioactive
source inside the patient's body, directly into or near the tumor.
- The radioactive material is
often sealed in small devices like seeds, pellets, ribbons, wires,
needles, balloons, or tubes (implants).
- This allows for a higher dose
of radiation to be delivered to a smaller area, minimizing damage to
surrounding healthy tissues.
- The placement of the implant
can be temporary or permanent.
- Temporary brachytherapy: The radioactive source is
placed for a specific time (from minutes to days) and then removed. This
can be done at a low dose rate (LDR) over a longer period or a high dose rate
(HDR) over a shorter period.
- Permanent brachytherapy (seed
implantation): Small
radioactive seeds are implanted in or near the tumor and remain there.
They release radiation over time and eventually become inactive.
- Brachytherapy is used to treat
various cancers, including prostate, cervical, endometrial, vaginal,
breast, and eye cancers.
What are different types of EBRT?
3D-CRT, IMRT, IGRT, SBRT/SRS, proton therapy
- 3D-Conformal Radiation Therapy
(3D-CRT):
- This technique uses
sophisticated imaging (like CT scans) to create a three-dimensional
picture of the tumor and surrounding healthy tissues.
- Radiation beams are then
shaped and directed from multiple angles to conform precisely to the
tumor's shape.
- The goal is to deliver a high
dose of radiation to the tumor while minimizing the dose to nearby
critical organs and normal tissues.
- 3D-CRT was a significant
advancement over traditional 2D radiation therapy, offering improved
accuracy.
- Intensity-Modulated Radiation
Therapy (IMRT):
- IMRT is a more advanced form
of 3D-CRT. It not only shapes the radiation beams to the tumor but also
modulates (varies) the intensity of the radiation within each beam.
- This allows for even more
precise targeting of the tumor and further reduction of radiation
exposure to surrounding healthy tissues, especially complexly shaped
tumors or those located near sensitive structures.
- IMRT can deliver different
doses of radiation to different parts of the tumor, potentially
increasing the dose to the most aggressive areas while limiting it to
more sensitive regions within or adjacent to the tumor.
- Image-Guided Radiation Therapy
(IGRT):
- IGRT involves using imaging
techniques (like X-rays, CT scans, ultrasound, or MRI) before and
sometimes during each radiation treatment session.
- These images help to verify
the patient's position and the tumor's location, accounting for any
movement or changes that might have occurred since the initial treatment
planning.
- By ensuring accurate targeting
daily, IGRT allows for the delivery of higher doses of radiation to the
tumor while further minimizing damage to healthy tissues. IGRT is often
used in conjunction with IMRT and other advanced techniques.
- Stereotactic Body Radiation
Therapy (SBRT) and Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS):
- These techniques deliver very
high doses of precisely focused radiation to small, well-defined tumors
in a limited number of treatment sessions (typically 1 to 5).
- SRS traditionally refers to the
treatment of tumors in the brain and spine, often in a single session. It
requires highly specialized equipment and meticulous patient
immobilization (e.g., with a head frame). Despite the name
"surgery," it is non-invasive.
- SBRT extends the principles of SRS
to treat tumors in other parts of the body (e.g., lung, liver, prostate).
It may involve a few more treatment fractions than SRS.
- Both SBRT and SRS rely on
sophisticated imaging and precise beam delivery to ablate the tumor while
sharply limiting radiation to surrounding healthy tissues.
- Proton Therapy:
- Instead of using X-rays
(photons), proton therapy uses beams of protons.
- Protons have a unique
property: they deposit most of their energy at a specific depth (called
the Bragg peak) and then stop, delivering very little radiation beyond
the target.
- This allows for potentially
less radiation exposure to healthy tissues located beyond the tumor
compared to photon-based therapies, which continue to deposit some dose
as they exit the body.
- Proton therapy is particularly
beneficial for treating tumors located near critical structures, in
children (to minimize long-term side effects), and for certain types of
cancers where minimizing exit dose is crucial. However, it is a more
expensive and less widely available technology than traditional EBRT.
How does brachytherapy work?
Radioactive source placed inside or near the tumor
Brachytherapy,
also known as internal radiation therapy, works by placing a radioactive source
directly inside or very close to the tumor. This allows for a high dose of
radiation to be delivered to a small, targeted area, minimizing damage to the
surrounding healthy tissues. Here's a more detailed breakdown of the process:
- Placement of the Radioactive
Source:
- The radioactive material is
typically sealed within a small device, such as a seed, pellet, wire,
ribbon, needle, balloon, or tube (an implant).
- The method of placement
depends on the type and location of the cancer. It can involve:
- Intracavitary placement: The device containing the
radioactive source is placed in a body cavity near the tumor, such as
the vagina, uterus, or windpipe.
- Interstitial placement: The device is inserted
directly into the tumor tissue, for example, in the prostate or breast.
- Surface mold brachytherapy: A radioactive source is
placed in a mold that fits over the surface of the area being treated,
often used for skin cancers.
- Intraluminal brachytherapy: The source is placed within
a body tube or passageway, like the esophagus or trachea.
- Delivery of Radiation:
- Once the radioactive source is
in place, it emits radiation that directly targets the cancer cells.
- The high concentration of
radiation at the tumor site helps to destroy or damage the cancer cells,
preventing them from growing and dividing.
- Because the radiation travels
only a short distance from the source, the exposure to nearby healthy
tissues is significantly reduced compared to external beam radiation
therapy.
- Temporary vs. Permanent
Brachytherapy:
- Temporary Brachytherapy: The radioactive source is
placed in the body for a specific amount of time (ranging from minutes to
days) and then removed. This allows for a concentrated dose of radiation
to be delivered over a defined period.
- High-Dose Rate (HDR)
brachytherapy:
Delivers a high dose of radiation in a short time (minutes per session),
and the source is removed after each session. Patients may have multiple
HDR treatments over several days.
- Low-Dose Rate (LDR)
brachytherapy:
Delivers a lower dose of radiation continuously over a longer period
(hours or days). This often requires a hospital stay in a private room
with radiation safety precautions in place until the source is removed.
- Pulsed-Dose Rate (PDR)
brachytherapy:
Delivers radiation in short pulses over a period of hours or days.
- Permanent Brachytherapy (Seed
Implantation): Small
radioactive seeds (about the size of a grain of rice) are implanted
directly into the tumor and remain there permanently. These seeds release
radiation slowly over several weeks or months and eventually become
inactive.
- Imaging Guidance:
- Throughout the brachytherapy
procedure, imaging techniques such as ultrasound, CT scans, or MRI are
used to guide the placement of the radioactive source and ensure it is
accurately positioned to target the tumor.
What are different types of brachytherapy?
Interstitial, intracavitary, surface
- Interstitial Brachytherapy:
- In this type, the radioactive
source is placed directly into the tumor or the tissue surrounding
it.
- This is achieved using
needles, wires, catheters, or small seeds that are implanted into the
target area.
- Interstitial brachytherapy is
commonly used to treat cancers of the prostate, breast, soft tissues
(sarcomas), head and neck, and gynecological cancers.
- The implants can be temporary
(removed after a specific time) or permanent (left in the body, where
they gradually lose their radioactivity).
- Intracavitary Brachytherapy:
- Here, the radioactive source
is placed within a body cavity that is close to the tumor.
- Applicators, such as cylinders
or ovoids, are inserted into the cavity (e.g., vagina, uterus, esophagus,
bronchus) and the radioactive material is placed inside them.
- This method is frequently used
to treat gynecological cancers (cervical, endometrial, vaginal), as well
as some lung and esophageal cancers.
- Intracavitary brachytherapy is
typically a temporary treatment, with the applicators and radioactive
source removed after the prescribed dose is delivered.
- Surface Brachytherapy (Mold
Brachytherapy):
- In this technique, the
radioactive source is placed on the surface of the body near the
skin cancer or other superficial lesion.
- Custom-made molds or
applicators that conform to the treated area hold the radioactive
material in close contact with the surface.
- This type of brachytherapy is
primarily used to treat skin cancers (basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell
carcinoma) and Kaposi's sarcoma.
- Surface brachytherapy is
usually a temporary treatment, with the mold and radioactive source
removed after each treatment session.
What is the difference between external and internal radiation?
External delivers radiation from outside the body,
internal from a source inside the body
- External Radiation Therapy
(EBRT)
delivers radiation from a source outside the patient's body,
directed at the tumor.
- Internal Radiation Therapy
(Brachytherapy)
delivers radiation from a radioactive source placed inside the
patient's body, directly within or near the tumor.
What is stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and
stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT)?
Highly precise forms of EBRT delivering high doses in
few fractions
Stereotactic
Radiosurgery (SRS):
- Historically focused on the
brain and spine: SRS
was initially developed for treating small to medium-sized tumors and
other abnormalities within the brain and spine.
- Often a single fraction: Typically delivered in just
one treatment session, although sometimes a few fractions
(hypofractionation) are used.
- Requires rigid immobilization: Due to the high precision
needed, patients often require a rigid head frame or other immobilization
devices to prevent any movement during treatment.
- Non-invasive: Despite the name
"surgery," SRS is a non-surgical procedure.
- Examples of treated conditions: Brain metastases, primary
brain tumors (e.g., meningiomas, acoustic neuromas), arteriovenous
malformations (AVMs), trigeminal neuralgia.
Stereotactic
Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT):
- Extends the principles to the
rest of the body: SBRT applies the same high-precision,
high-dose-per-fraction approach to tumors located outside the brain and
spine (e.g., in the lungs, liver, prostate, adrenal glands, bones, lymph nodes).
- Typically delivered in a few
fractions: SBRT
usually involves 2 to 5 treatment sessions, sometimes more depending on
the tumor and location.
- Requires sophisticated
immobilization and motion management: Treating areas outside the brain and spine
necessitates advanced techniques to account for patient movement and organ
motion (e.g., respiratory gating, compression devices).
- Also non-invasive: Like SRS, SBRT is a
non-surgical radiation delivery method.
- Examples of treated conditions: Early-stage lung cancer, liver
metastases, adrenal tumors, oligometastatic disease (cancer that has
spread to a limited number of sites).
What is proton therapy, and how does it differ from traditional
photon (X-ray) radiation?
Uses protons instead of photons, allowing for more precise targeting and
reduced exit dose
Proton
Therapy:
- Uses Protons: Instead of photons (which are
electromagnetic radiation with no mass), proton therapy utilizes beams of protons,
which are positively charged subatomic particles with mass. These protons
are accelerated to very high speeds.
- The Bragg Peak: The fundamental advantage of
proton therapy lies in a unique physical property called the Bragg peak.
As protons travel through tissue, they deposit a relatively small amount
of energy along their path. However, at a specific depth determined by the
initial energy of the proton beam, they release the majority of their
energy in a very narrow peak – this is the Bragg peak. After the Bragg
peak, the proton beam stops, depositing virtually no further dose beyond
the target.
- Precise Targeting: By carefully controlling the
energy of the proton beam, radiation oncologists can precisely position
the Bragg peak to coincide with the tumor's location and depth. This
allows for a high dose of radiation to be delivered directly to the tumor
while significantly reducing the dose to surrounding healthy tissues both
in front of and, crucially, behind the tumor.
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