Men and women discussing brain tumoursStereotactic radiotherapy for brain tumours

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Stereotactic radiotherapy for brain tumours

Stereotactic radiotherapy is a relatively new type of treatment. It is not available at all hospitals. You have the treatment aimed at your tumour from many different points around your head. The beam is targeted very accurately. This means that less of your healthy brain tissue is exposed to radiation, so there are fewer side effects than with the usual type of radiotherapy.

What is this treatment used for?

Stereotactic radiotherapy can be used for secondary brain tumours, and gliomas that have come back since they were first treated. It can also be used for a number of benign brain tumours. It is not suitable as the main treatment for high grade brain tumours.

Planning your treatment

You will need to have a headframe or mask made to keep your head still during treatment. Then the specialist uses a CT or MRI scanner to work out how to shape the radiotherapy beam so that it exactly fits your tumour. This is done very precisely.

Having your treatment

You will have to go to the hospital a number of times to have treatment. The treatment itself does not take very long. But it will take a little while to get you into the mask and headframe and position you on the table. As soon as the treatment is over you can go home.

 

What stereotactic radiotherapy is

Stereotactic radiotherapy is a relatively new type of treatment. You have the treatment aimed at the tumour from many different points around your head. This type of treatment is not available at all hospitals because it needs specialist equipment and skills.

The radiotherapy beam is targeted very accurately with this type of treatment. So it is vitally important that your head is in exactly the same position each time and does not move while you are being treated.

You have the treatment with a linear accelerator. This is the same type of radiotherapy machine used for regular external beam radiotherapy. It is possible to split the treatment up into fractions (daily treatments) with this type of machine. It is usual to have between 6 and 25 fractions. A single fraction of stereotactic radiotherapy is called radiosurgery.

 

What it is used for

This type of treatment can be used for

  • Secondary brain tumours
  • Gliomas that have come back since they were first treated

It is also used for a number of benign (non-cancerous) brain tumours such as

You can't have this type of treatment as your main treatment for high grade brain tumours. These tend to send finger-like growths into the normal brain tissue. This would mean that you would need to have too large an area of the brain treated.

 

The head frame

To have this treatment, you need to have a head frame made. This can take up to a week to do and must be very accurate. The frame is made very carefully and specifically for you, using the information from your scans.

Another way of fixing the frame is to have a thermoplastic mask made. The frame fixes to the mask. The mask in turn attaches to the scanner or radiotherapy machine bed while you are wearing it. This means you cannot move, but there is nothing actually attached to you directly.

 

Planning

This is similar to having planning for normal external radiotherapy. The specialist needs to use a CTscanner or MRI scanner. You have to wear your mask and head frame while your treatment is being planned.

During planning, your specialist uses the scan to work out how to shape the radiotherapy beam so that it exactly fits your tumour. This means that the normal brain tissue surrounding the tumour gets a very low dose of radiation. So you will have fewer side effects (see below).

The planning session is the most important part of your treatment. Your specialist has to do this very carefully and precisely and it can take up to 2 ½ hours.

 

Having your treatment

You will have to go to the hospital a number of times to have treatment. The treatment itself does not take very long. But it will take a little while to get you into the mask and head frame and position you on the radiotherapy table. As soon as each treatment is over, you can go home.

 

Side effects

This type of treatment has fewer side effects than the usual type of radiotherapy. This is because less healthy brain tissue is exposed to radiation. You will not normally have hair loss, feel sick or have any reddening of your skin. All these are common side effects of regular external beam radiotherapy to the brain.