Treatment Overview
Radiation therapy uses high doses of
radiation to destroy or shrink advanced or metastatic melanoma with little harm
to nearby healthy tissue. Radiation damages the genetic material of cancer
cells, stopping their growth.
Treatment is usually done several
times a week for up to 6 weeks.
What To Expect After Treatment
Recovery depends on the tumor site,
the stage of the melanoma, and how much healthy tissue is
irradiated during treatment.
Why It Is Done
Radiation therapy may be used to
treat
metastatic melanoma and melanoma in the eye (ocular
melanoma).
How Well It Works
Radiation usually does not cure
melanoma. It relieves bone pain and other symptoms caused by metastases to the
bones, brain, and organs such as the liver.1 Radiation
treatment is being investigated for more widespread use in controlling other
symptoms of skin cancer.
Risks
Risks of radiation therapy include:
- Fatigue.
- Nausea and
vomiting.
- Discoloration (usually pink or reddish), dryness, or
shrinking of skin (radiation dermatitis).
- Diarrhea if the skin over
the abdomen or pelvis is radiated.
What To Think About
Experts disagree about the role
of radiation therapy for
metastatic melanoma. It is not clear how much
radiation is needed to kill the melanoma without damaging surrounding normal
tissue.
Superficial contact radiation therapy has been used in
Europe for the treatment of primary melanoma. This therapy uses high doses of
radiation and is suitable only for superficial melanomas, those on the skin
surface that have not penetrated into the skin layers.
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