Treatment Overview
Radiation therapy uses high doses of
radiation, such as X-rays, to destroy cancer cells. The radiation damages the
genetic material of the cells so that they can't grow. Although radiation
damages normal cells as well as cancer cells, the normal cells can repair
themselves and function, while the cancer cells cannot.
Radiation
therapy may be used alone or combined with hormonal treatment to treat
. It is most effective in treating
cancers that have not spread outside the prostate. But it also may be used if
the cancer has spread to nearby tissue. Radiation is sometimes used after
surgery to destroy any remaining cancer cells and to relieve pain from
metastatic cancer.
Radiation is delivered in one of two ways.
- External-beam radiation therapy uses a
large machine to aim a beam of radiation at your tumor. After the area of
cancer is identified, an ink tattoo no bigger than a pencil tip is placed on
your skin so that the radiation beam can be aimed at the same spot for each
treatment. This helps focus the beam on your cancer to protect nearby healthy
tissue from the radiation. External radiation treatments usually are done 5
days a week for 4 to 8 weeks. If cancer has spread to your bones, shorter
periods of treatment may be given to specific areas to relieve pain.
- Conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) uses a
three-dimensional planning system to target a strong dose of radiation to the
prostate cancer. This helps to protect healthy tissue from radiation.
- Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) uses a carefully adjusted amount of radiation. This protects
healthy tissues more than conformal radiotherapy does.
- Brachytherapy, or internal
radiation therapy, uses dozens of tiny seeds that contain radioactive material.
It may be used to treat early-stage prostate cancer. Needles are used to insert
the seeds through your skin into your prostate. The surgeon uses
to locate your prostate and guide the
needles. As the needles are pulled out, the seeds are left in place. The seeds
release radiation for weeks or months, after which they are no longer
radioactive. The radiation in the seeds can't be aimed as accurately as
external beams, but they are less likely to damage normal tissue. After the
seeds have lost their radioactivity, they become harmless and can stay in
place.
Sometimes treatment combines brachytherapy with low-dose
external radiation. In other cases, treatment combines surgery with external
radiation.