Radiation
For patients with localized disease, and who can
tolerate a radical surgery, radiation is often given
post-operatively as a consolidative treatment. The entire
hemi-thorax is treated with radiation therapy, often given
simultaneously with chemotherapy. This approach of using surgery
followed by radiation with chemotherapy has been pioneered by the
thoracic oncology team at Brigham & Women's Hospital in Boston.
Delivering radiation and chemotherapy after a radical surgery has
led to extended life expectancy in selected patient populations
with some patients surviving more than 5 years. As part of a
curative approach to mesothelioma, radiotherapy is also commonly
applied to the sites of chest drain insertion, in order to prevent
growth of the tumor along the track in the chest wall.
Although mesothelioma is generally resistant to
curative treatment with radiotherapy alone, palliative treatment
regimens are sometimes used to relieve symptoms arising from tumor
growth, such as obstruction of a major blood vessel. Radiation
therapy when given alone with curative intent has never been shown
to improve survival from mesothelioma. The necessary radiation dose
to treat mesothelioma that has not been surgically removed would be
very toxic.
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