Radiation therapy and chemotherapy are effective modalities in cancer management. Both treatments have their own advantages and drawbacks.
World Cancer Day is observed on February 4 every year. The day aims to promote awareness about cancer. Cancer is a large group of diseases that can affect any organ or tissue of the body. It refers to the abnormal growth of cells that divide uncontrollably. The primary modalities of cancer treatment include radiation therapy, chemotherapy, surgery, hormonal therapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. Increasingly, cancer treatment is moving towards multimodality care.
Chemotherapy and radiotherapy represent two distinct types of cancer treatment. However, since both have a similar suffix and are used for cancer management, patients and the lay public can often get confused with these similar-appearing terms.
Chemotherapy involves administering medications intravenously or orally. The aim is to circulate the medicine throughout the body, thereby targeting cancer cells. This is also called systemic treatment because it can reach cancer cells locally and at distant sites.
Radiation treatment is a very focused treatment of the local site. It works by damaging the DNA of cancer cells. Radiation therapy uses high-energy rays or particles carefully targeted at the tumor or other sites at risk. It is a targeted, localized procedure that primarily targets the region of the body where the radiation is administered.
Depending on the tumor site, Radiation therapy can be given alone, in combination with surgery or chemotherapy, or for palliative treatment in advanced cases. Nearly 60%-70% of all cancer cases would require radiation therapy at some point in their overall treatment course.
Chemotherapy is typically given in cycles (e.g., a dose repeated every two weeks shall be a two-weekly cycle). A particular regime of chemotherapy can last for 2-6 cycles. A typical infusion cycle of chemotherapy can be a single drug or a combination of drugs.
Contrary to this, radiation therapy is usually given daily (except on weekends). Typical schedules of radiation vary from 3-6 weeks. However, SRS (stereotactic radiosurgery) and SBRT (stereotactic body radiotherapy) can complete the entire treatment in 1 to 7 days. The latter techniques can be used only in a select group of patients, including patients with very early or localized disease.