Radiation Therapy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three indications for radiation therapy?

A

Incompletely resected tumours, Non-resectable tumours and pain control.

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2
Q

How does radiation therapy affect cells?

A

Direct and indirect damage to DNA (direct to DNA, and indirect by producing free radicals which then damage DNA).

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3
Q

What are the three possible pathways a cell can take when hit with radiation? Which is desirable?

A

1) Proliferation of cells (undesirable)
2) Cell death (most desirable)
3) Alive but unable to divide (beneficial in RT)

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4
Q

In what unit is radiation measured? How does the amount of grey’s delivered affect the cell response?

A

Grey’s. 10Gy-100Gy to cause intermitotic death.

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5
Q

What are the 4R’s of radiation?

A

Repair, repopulation, re-oxygenation and redistribution.

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6
Q

What is fractionation?

A

The total dose of radiation used to treat a tumour is usually divided into a number of fractions.

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7
Q

Why is fractionation important? How do the 4R’s fit in?

A

Fractionation spares normal tissues because it allows REPAIR of sublethal damage and REPOPULATION. It increases damage to tumour cells because of REOXYGENATION and REDISTRIBUTION.

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8
Q

How does fractionation help the repair of normal tissues?

A

It is assumed that tumour cells are less able to repair DNA. Therefore by adding another dose, it spares repaired normal cells, and kills non-repaired tumour cells.

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9
Q

How does fractionation help the repopulation of normal tissues?

A

RT can stimulate cell division by cells by “accelerated repopulation”. In normal tissues, this is kept under control by homeostatic mechanisms.

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10
Q

How does fractionation help to increase the damage to tumour cells by reoxygenation?

A

Tumour has poorly oxygenated necrotic centre which is not radiosensitive. Oxygenated cells are radiosensitive, between doses it allows necrotic centre to become oxygenated.

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11
Q

How does fractionation help to increase the damage to tumour cells by redistribution?

A

Cells are more radiosensitive to RT in M/G1/G2. Time between doses gives time for cell to move from S to more sensitive stages.

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12
Q

What types of radiation can be used in radiotherapy? Which machines can use them?

A

Orthovoltage: Photons (X-rays), not really used.
Cobalt-60: Photons (Gamma rays)
Megavoltage “Linear accelerator”: Photons (X-rays) or Electrons.

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13
Q

What are the characteristics of using photons in radiotherapy?

A

Highly penetrative, slow dose reduction, penetrates normal tissue. Needs CT based treatment planning. Fixed energy.

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14
Q

What are the characteristics of using electrons in radiotherapy?

A

Various energies, not very penetration, good for superficial use. e.g. injection site sarcoma. Rapid dose reduction.

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15
Q

What is the protocol in curative radiation therapy? What kind of side affects does curative RT produce?

A

More low doses, usually has ACUTE side effects rather than late side effects.

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16
Q

What are the absolute indications for curative radiation therapy? What kinds of tumours would it be used as the primary treatment?

A

When RT shows better results than other therapies. Primary Tx in Nasal tumours, brain tumours (palliative doesn’t work), oral tumours (SCC), epulis.

17
Q

In what types of tumours is curative radiation used as post surgery adjuvant RT?

A

Soft tissue sarcomas, feline injection site sarcoma (usually needed to cure)

18
Q

What is the protocol in palliative radiation therapy? What kind of side affects does palliative RT produce?

A

Few big fractions used, more likely to cause late effects, but usually don’t expect them to live that long.

19
Q

What two types of radiation therapy protocols?

A

Curative and palliative.

20
Q

What types of tumours might you use palliative radiation therapy on?

A

Radiosensitive tumours that are highly metastatic e.g. histiocytic sarcoma, oral melanoma, haemangiosarcoma, MCT grade III