Radiation therapy uses high-energy rays or particles to kill cancer cells. External beam radiation therapy focuses radiation from outside the body on the skin tumor. This type of radiation therapy is used for treating some patients with melanoma. The treatment is much like getting an x-ray, but the radiation is more intense. The procedure itself is painless. Each treatment lasts only a few minutes, although the setup time – getting you into place for treatment – usually takes longer.
Radiation therapy is not often used to treat the original melanoma that started on the skin. In some cases, it may be given as an adjuvant to surgery in the area where lymph nodes were removed, especially if many of the nodes contained cancer cells. This is to try to reduce the chance that the cancer will come back.
Radiation therapy may also be used to treat melanoma that has come back (recurred), either in the skin or lymph nodes, after surgery, or to treat distant spread of the disease.
Radiation therapy is often used to relieve symptoms caused by metastases to the brain or bone. Treatment with the goal of relieving symptoms is called palliative therapy. Palliative radiation therapy is not expected to cure the cancer, but it may help shrink it for a time to control some of the symptoms.
Side effects of external radiation therapy depend on where it is aimed. They might include sunburn-like skin problems and hair loss where the radiation enters the body, fatigue, nausea, and vomiting. Often these go away after treatment.
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