Healthy Balance

How Radiation Therapy Works

Stan Benedict, PhD, director of Radiological Physics in the Department of Radiation Oncology, and Paul Read, MD, PhD, vice chair of the Department of Radiation Oncology, contributed this post.

Varian TrueBeam
The Varian TrueBeam can accurately deliver radiation to tumors that move as a patient breathes.

Some cancer patients can be treated with surgery or chemotherapy alone, but about 50 percent will require a form of radiation therapy as part of their cancer treatment. This treatment sends high energy electrons or x-rays at an area of the body to cure the disease or shrink the tumor without damaging surrounding tissue.

Determining whether radiation therapy is needed and the type to use largely depends on the type of cancer as well as the exact location of the cancer inside the body, especially if the cancer is located near sensitive areas, such as the brain.

Which Types Treat Cancer?

The main difference in the three types of radiation therapy is the location of the radiation source used to treat cancers.

Radiation Therapy Options at the Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center

Patients who need radiation therapy have a host of treatment options at the UVA Cancer Center. The new Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center, which opened in April, offers some of the most advanced external beam radiotherapy and brachytherapy treatment options:

Learn more about the radiation therapy options available at the Couric Center.

 

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