Radiation therapy for endometrial cancer
Treatment Overview
Radiation therapy is the use of high-dose
X-rays to destroy cancer cells. Radiation therapy may be used to treat
endometrial cancer
after
hysterectomy
or as the primary therapy, particularly
for women who cannot have surgery. The two types of
radiation therapy that may be used to treat
endometrial cancer are:
- Internal radiation therapy (brachytherapy), in
which radioactive materials (radioisotopes) are placed into the vagina, uterus,
or other areas where the cancer cells are found.
- External beam
radiation therapy, in which radiation comes from a machine outside the
body.
What To Expect After Treatment
In brachytherapy, tiny tubes of
radioactive material are
inserted into the vagina or the uterus and left in
place for 2 to 3 days. Brachytherapy may be done in the hospital or as on an
outpatient basis.
External beam radiation therapy is usually done
in an outpatient treatment center. A typical therapy course is radiation
treatments 5 days a week for 4 to 6 weeks.
Radiation therapy may
cause side effects, including:
- Fatigue.
- Dryness, itching,
tightening, and burning in the vagina.
- Red, dry, tender, itchy
skin.
- Moist, weepy skin (later in the treatment).
- Hair
loss in the treated area.
- Loss of
appetite.
- Diarrhea.
- Frequent and uncomfortable
urination.
- Reduced white blood cell count.
For long-term side effects, see the Risks section
below.
Radiation therapy may make sexual intercourse uncomfortable.
You may have to wait until after treatment is finished to resume sexual
intercourse.
Why It Is Done
Radiation therapy is usually given
after surgery (
adjuvant therapy
) for endometrial cancer. Adjuvant
radiation may be recommended for women who have a high risk for the spread of
the cancer. If a woman cannot have surgery, she may receive radiation therapy
alone, but cure rates are slightly lower than with surgery.
Radiation therapy may be used at different points of treatment, depending
on the
stage and grade of the endometrial cancer.
- Stage I: Radiation therapy is not usually used
if surgery effectively removes the cancer. If cancer is found deep in the
uterine muscle (myometrium), radiation of the pelvis may be
given.
- Stage II: Radiation therapy may be used before or after
surgery. If cancer is present in the
cervix
, radiation may be used after
surgery.
- Stage III: Radiation therapy and surgery are the standard
treatment options. If surgery is not recommended, radiation therapy alone may
be used. Radiation therapy may also be used if more extensive cancer is
discovered during surgery.
- Stage IV: Radiation therapy may be used
if the cancer is contained in the pelvic region but is usually not recommended
if the cancer has spread (metastasized) to other parts of the body.
Endometrial cancer may recur. Radiation therapy may be used
to control symptoms and increase comfort. Radiation therapy may cure your
cancer if the cancer is confined to your vagina and radiation therapy has not
been used before.
How Well It Works
Radiation therapy for endometrial
cancer is used primarily as adjuvant therapy with surgery (hysterectomy and
bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy). It is usually not recommended unless you have
a high risk of cancer spreading beyond the uterus. Adjuvant radiation therapy
can reduce cancer recurrence in the pelvis and vagina.
1,
2
Risks
Having radiation therapy to any part of the
pelvis can cause side effects such as bladder irritation. These side effects
may stop after treatment is finished.
Other side effects of
radiation can include:
3
- Bowel obstruction.
- Abdominal
cramps.
- Frequent bowel movements or diarrhea.
- Chronic
bladder irritation.
- Vaginal scarring (vaginal fibrosis).
What To Think About
For some women with stage 3 or 4
cancer, chemotherapy with radiation may work better than radiation
alone.
4
Radiation therapy to the pelvis
causes permanent sterility. If your cancer is in a very early stage and is low
grade (slow-growing) and you want to be able to have children, progestin
hormone therapy may be an option rather than a hysterectomy and/or radiation
therapy.
Complete the
special treatment information form (PDF)
(What is a
PDF
document?)
to help you understand this treatment.
References
Citations
-
Cannistra SA (2007). Gynecologic cancer. In DC Dale,
DD Federman, eds., ACP Medicine, section 12, chap. 10.
New York: WebMD.
-
Creutzberg CL, et al. (2003). Survival after relapse
in patients with endometrial cancer: Results from a randomized trial.
Gynecologic Oncology, 89: 201–209.
-
Creutzberg CL, et al. (2000). Surgery and
postoperative radiotherapy versus surgery alone for patients with stage-1
endometrial carcinoma: Multicentre randomised trial. Lancet, 355: 1404–1411.
-
Randall ME, et al. (2006). Randomized phase III trial of whole-abdominal irradiation versus doxorubicin and cisplatin chemotherapy in advanced endometrial carcinoma: A gynecologic oncology group study. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 24(1): 36–44.
Last Updated:November 26, 2008
Cannistra SA (2007). Gynecologic cancer. In DC Dale,
DD Federman, eds., ACP Medicine, section 12, chap. 10.
New York: WebMD.
Creutzberg CL, et al. (2003). Survival after relapse
in patients with endometrial cancer: Results from a randomized trial.
Gynecologic Oncology, 89: 201–209.
Creutzberg CL, et al. (2000). Surgery and
postoperative radiotherapy versus surgery alone for patients with stage-1
endometrial carcinoma: Multicentre randomised trial. Lancet, 355: 1404–1411.
Randall ME, et al. (2006). Randomized phase III trial of whole-abdominal irradiation versus doxorubicin and cisplatin chemotherapy in advanced endometrial carcinoma: A gynecologic oncology group study. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 24(1): 36–44.