Treatment Options

Surgery

Radiation Therapy
Partial Breast Irradiation
Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy

Treatment Decisions

Additional Therapy

Treatment Team
Radiation Therapy

Radiation therapy as a primary treatment is a promising technique for women who have early stage breast cancer. This procedure allows a woman to keep her breast and involves lumpectomy followed by radiation (x-ray) treatment.

Once a biopsy has been done and breast cancer has been diagnosed, radiation treatment usually involves the following steps:

Surgery to evaluate underarm lymph nodes to see if the cancer has spread beyond the breast, (i.e. sentinel lymph node biopsy or axillary lymph node dissection).

External radiation therapy to the breast and the surrounding area (involving approximately 5 weeks of treatment).

"Boost" radiation therapy to the biopsy site which is usually marked with surgical clips to mark the tumor bed (one additional week of radiation therapy).

For external radiation therapy, a machine beams x-rays to the breast and possibly the underarm lymph nodes. The usual schedule for radiation therapy is 5 days a week for about 5 to 7 weeks. In some instances, a "boost" or concentrated dose of radiation may be given to the area where the cancer was located. This can be done with an electron beam. Less frequently used is a boost done internally with an implant of radioactive materials.

If you are having radiation therapy as primary treatment for early stage breast cancer, a qualified, board-certified radiation therapist who is experienced in this form of treatment should do it.

ADVANTAGES:
• The breast is not removed.
Lumpectomy with radiation therapy as a primary treatment for breast cancer appears is as effective as mastectomy for treating early stage breast cancer.
• The skin usually regains a normal appearance.

DISADVANTAGES:
• A full course of treatment requires short daily outpatient hospital visits for approximately 5 weeks.
• Treatment may produce a skin reaction like sunburn and may cause fatigue.
• Itching or peeling of the skin may occur.
• Radiation therapy can sometimes cause a temporary decrease in white blood cell count, which may increase the risk of infection.
• You maintain your breast and therefore have a variable risk of local recurrence which may require a mastectomy should cancer return.
• Post-mastectomy reconstruction options are limited after radiation therapy to the breast.

© 2005 Virginia Breast Center