Radiation Treatments
(information from
www.radiologyinfo.org)
Radiation Oncologists and facilities in Martin and St. Lucie Counties
Treatment options overview
Types of radiation therapy might
How can I make a decision between mastectomy
and breast conservation therapy?
Is radiation therapy necessary
if the margins of the removed tissue are negative?
What are the cosmetic results of breast
conservation therapy?
What is the prognosis after recurrence?
What happens during radiation therapy?
What are possible side effects of radiation
therapy?
Skin care recommendations include:
What are some of the possible risks
or complications?
What kind of treatment follow-up should I
expect?
Are there any new developments in treating
my disease?
Accelerated Partial Breast
Irradiation (Mammosite, ClearPath)
Radiation After Mastectomy
Clinical Trials
Additional Breast Cancer Information and
Resources
Treatment options overview
Treatment options include mastectomy or breast conservation therapy
(BCT). Mastectomy is an operation to remove the entire breast, including
the nipple. Often an axillary dissection is also done which removes the
glands under the arm called axillary nodes. Mastectomy usually requires
a hospital stay. Women who undergo a mastectomy have the option of
breast reconstruction.
Breast conservation surgery removes the breast tumor and a margin of
surrounding normal tissues. It is also known by other names: lumpectomy,
partial mastectomy, segmental mastectomy and quadrantectomy. Radiation
therapy usually follows lumpectomy to eliminate any microscopic cancer
cells in the remaining breast tissue. The purpose of breast conservation
therapy is to give women the same cure rate they would have if they were
treated with a mastectomy but to leave the breast intact, with an
appearance and texture as close as possible to what they had before
treatment. The surgeon may remove the lymph nodes (axillary dissection)
at the same time as the lumpectomy procedure or later. It is estimated
that 75 percent to 80 percent of patients can be treated with breast
conservation therapy rather than mastectomy with excellent results.
Years of clinical study have proven that breast conservation therapy
offers the same cure rate as mastectomy.
Your radiation therapy
procedure might include:
▪ External Beam Therapy - see
External Beam
Therapy
▪ Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy - see
Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy
▪ Interstitial Therapy (or "Brachytherapy") - the temporary placement of
radioactive materials within the breast, usually employed to give an
extra
dose of radiation to the area of the excision site (called a "boost"). -
see
Brachytherapy page
Patients may also have chemotherapy or hormonal therapy if there is a risk
that the cancer may have spread outside of the breast to other body
organs.
How can I make a decision between
mastectomy and breast conservation therapy?
Breast conservation therapy is used for patients with early-stage
invasive breast cancers (called Stage I and Stage II in the
classification system). It is also used for patients with ductal
carcinoma in situ (DCIS, called Stage 0). Some of the reasons to not
have breast conservation therapy include: personal preference; increased
risk of complications from radiation therapy in individuals with certain
rare medical conditions; and tumors that are more likely than average to
have a relapse in the breast with breast conservation therapy.
Most patients can choose a treatment based on other factors, such as
convenience (for example, how far you must travel to receive radiation
therapy) or personal preference (feeling safer if you undergo a
mastectomy or being very worried about the possible side effects from
radiation therapy). Most women prefer to keep their breast if this is
possible to do safely, but there is no right answer for everyone.
However, this decision is not one the physician can make for you.
Nearly all physicians will recommend patients be treated with mastectomy
instead of breast conservation therapy when the risk of recurrence in
the breast is more than 20 percent. This is the case if the tumor is
large or multifocal. This situation occurs for only a small number of
women, however.
Is radiation therapy
necessary if the margins of the removed tissue are negative?
Many studies have reviewed this approach for patients with invasive
cancers. Nearly all show that the risk of relapse in the breast is much
higher when radiation is not used (20 percent to 40 percent) than when
it is (5 percent to 10 percent). Having breast cancer reappear in this
way is a very traumatic event psychologically. Also, patients may need
to have a mastectomy to be cured in this situation, so in more cases
they may lose the breast than if they had undergone radiation therapy
initially. Finally, not everyone who has a recurrence in the breast can
be cured. Therefore, radiation therapy after lumpectomy is the standard
treatment around the world.
There are several recent studies in which older patients with small,
favorable invasive cancers have had a low risk of local relapse when
treated with lumpectomy and hormonal therapy without radiation therapy.
There is still uncertainty about the long-term results with this
approach or about which individuals will do best without radiation
therapy. This issue should be discussed in detail with your doctor.
For patients with noninvasive cancer (known as "ductal carcinoma in
situ") matters are more complicated. Lumpectomy without radiation works
well for many patients. However, there is disagreement on who can be
treated safely with just a lumpectomy. This should be discussed in
detail with your doctor.
What are the cosmetic results of
breast conservation therapy?
Eighty percent to 90 percent of women treated with modern surgery and
radiotherapy techniques have excellent or good cosmetic results; that
is, little or no change in the treated breast in size, shape, texture or
appearance compared with what it was like before treatment.
Patients with large breasts seem to have greater shrinkage of the breast
after radiation therapy than do smaller-breasted patients. However, this
problem usually can be overcome with the use of higher x-ray energies
and IMRT.
What is the prognosis after recurrence?
Many patients with a recurrence of breast cancer can be successfully
treated, often with methods other than radiation if radiation was used
in the initial treatment. For patients treated initially for invasive
breast cancer, 5 percent to 10 percent will be found to have distant
metastases at the time of discovery of the breast recurrence. The same
proportion will have recurrences that are too extensive to be operated
on. These patients are rarely, if ever, cured. Five-year cure rates for
patients with relapse after breast conservation therapy are
approximately 60 percent to 75 percent if the relapse is confined to the
breast and a mastectomy is then performed.
For patients treated initially for ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS),
about one-half of recurrences are invasive and one-half noninvasive
DCIS. Cure rates following recurrence after initial breast conservation
therapy have been high (90 percent to 100 percent) in some studies but
are not always perfect.
What happens during radiation
therapy?
Radiation is a special kind of energy carried by waves or a stream of
particles. When radiation is used at high doses (many times those used
for x-ray imaging exams) it can destroy abnormal cells that cause cancer
and other illnesses.
What are possible side effects of
radiation therapy?
There are no immediate side effects from each radiation treatment given
to the breast. Patients do not develop nausea or hair loss on the head.
Most patients develop mild fatigue that builds up gradually over the
course of therapy. This slowly goes away one to two months following the
radiation therapy. Most patients develop dull aches or sharp shooting
pains in the breast that may last for a few seconds or minutes. It is
rare for patients to need any medication for this. The most common side
effect needing attention is skin reaction. Most patients develop
reddening, dryness and itching of the skin after a few weeks. Some
patients develop substantial irritation.
Skin care recommendations include:
▪ Keeping the skin clean and dry using warm water and gentle soap
▪ Avoiding extreme temperatures while bathing
▪ Avoiding trauma to the skin and sun exposure (use a sunscreen with at
least SPF 30)
▪ Avoiding shaving the treatment area with a razor blade (use an
electric razor if necessary)
▪ Avoiding use of perfumes, cosmetics, after-shave or deodorants in the
treatment area (use cornstarch with or without baking soda in place of
deodorants)
▪ Using only recommended unscented creams or lotions after daily
treatment.
Some patients develop a sunburn-like reaction with blistering and
peeling of the skin, called "moist desquamation." This usually occurs in
the fold under the breast or in the fold between the breast and the arm,
or sometimes in the area given a radiation boost. Most people with a
limited area of moist desquamation can continue treatment without
interruption. When treatment must be interrupted, the skin usually heals
enough to allow radiation to be resumed in five to seven days. Skin
reactions usually heal completely within a few weeks of completing
radiotherapy.
What are some of the possible
risks or complications?
Minor complications include:
▪ Slight swelling of the breast during radiotherapy. This usually goes
away within six to 12 months.
▪ The skin becomes darker during the course of radiotherapy, similar to
tanning from the sun. In most cases, this also fades gradually over six
to 12
months.
▪ Most women will have aches or pains from time to time in the treated
breast or the muscles surrounding the breast, even years after
treatment.
The reason why this happens is
not clear; however, these pains are harmless, although annoying. They
are NOT a sign that the cancer is
reappearing.
▪ Rarely, patients may develop a rib fracture years following treatment.
This occurs in less than 1 percent of patients treated by modern
approaches.
These heal slowly by themselves.
More serious complications include:
▪ Very rarely, patients develop a breakdown of the skin, fractures of
the sternum (breastbone) or such severe pain in the breast that surgery
is
needed for treatment.
▪ Radiation therapy given to the axillary lymph nodes can increase the
risk of patients developing arm swelling ("lymphedema") following
axillary
(armpit) dissection. Radiation to this area can cause numbness, tingling
or even pain and loss of strength in the hand and arm years after
treatment. Fortunately, both these treatment effects are very rare.
▪ Some patients develop "radiation pneumonitis," a lung reaction that
causes a cough, shortness of breath and fevers three to nine months
after
completing treatment. Fortunately, it is usually mild enough that no
specific treatment is needed and it goes away within two to four weeks
with no
long-term complications.
▪ Radiotherapy may damage the heart. Fortunately, radiation techniques
used now treat much less of the heart than those used in the past.
Current
studies have found no increased risk of serious heart disease in patients
treated with modern techniques even 10 to 20 years after radiotherapy
treatment was given. However, there is still some uncertainty about the
risks of radiation causing heart disease for individuals who smoke or
have
pre-existing heart disease, or for those who receive certain chemotherapy
drugs. It is likely that such risks will also be found to be very small.
▪ Women age 45 or younger at the time of treatment may have a slightly
increased risk (by a few percent at most) of developing cancer of the
other
breast with time, compared with the risk they would have if they did not
undergo radiation. There is a very small risk (perhaps one in 1,000
individuals) that cancers may develop five, 10, 20 or more years later in
the skin, muscle, bone or lung directly in the area of treatment.
What kind of treatment follow-up
should I expect?
The major goal of follow-up is, if possible, to detect and treat
recurrences in the irradiated breast or lymph nodes and new cancers
developing later in either breast before they can spread to other parts
of the body. The routine use of bone scans, chest x-rays, blood tests
and other tests to detect the possible spread to other organs in
patients without symptoms does not appear to be useful. Your physician
will determine a follow-up schedule for you. This may include a physical
exam every few months for the first several years after treatment and
then every six to 12 months or so after that. Annual follow-up
mammograms are an important part of your care. If symptoms or clinical
circumstances suggest a recurrence, diagnostic tests such as blood
tests, ultrasound, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI), chest x-ray (CXR), or bone scan may be needed.
Are there any new developments in
treating my disease?
Partial breast irradiation with brachytherapy or IMRT is being explored
and compared to whole breast irradiation.
Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation
External beam radiation therapy to the whole breast for several weeks
after a lumpectomy is the standard of care for early-stage breast
cancer. In clinical trials, doctors are studying if accelerated partial
breast irradiation (or APBI) — where radiation is delivered to only part
of the breast over four to five days — works as well. These techniques
are only available in a few clinics and then only to a select group of
patients.
• Breast brachytherapy involves placing flexible plastic tubes called
catheters or a balloon into the breast. Twice a day for five days, the
catheters or
the balloon are connected to a brachytherapy machine, also called a
high-dose-rate afterloader. Your radiation oncologist then directs a
special
computer to guide a small, radioactive seed into the breast tissue near
where the tumor was removed. The radiation is left in place for several
minutes. After the end of the five days, the catheters or balloon are
removed.
Partial Breast Irradiation can include:
• Mammosite
• ClearPath
• 3-D conformal partial breast irradiation is a type of external beam
radiation therapy where only part of the breast receives external beam
radiation.
Radiation After Mastectomy
After a mastectomy, your doctor may suggest radiation therapy for the
chest wall and nearby lymph node areas.
• Whether or not radiation therapy should be used after removal of the
breast depends on several factors. These factors include the number of
lymph
nodes involved, tumor size and whether or not cancer cells were found
near the edge of the tissue that was removed.
• Many patients who have a mastectomy can safely skip radiation therapy.
Ask your doctor for more information.
Clinical Trials
For information and resources about clinical trials and to learn about
current clinical trials being conducted, see...
▪
Clinical Trials - from RadiologyInfo's News section
▪ Clinical Trials -
from the National Cancer Institute's Web site
Additional Breast Cancer
Information and Resources:
RadiologyInfo:
Mammography
RTAnswers.com:
Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer
National Cancer Institute:
Breast Cancer
American Cancer Society:
All About
Breast Cancer
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