Brachytherapy or implant therapy
Also known as internal radiation, brachytherapy
involves placing radioactive material into a tumor
or its surrounding tissue. This therapy delivers
a large dose of radiation directly to the cancer
cells with minimal exposure to normal, surrounding
tissue.
The radioactive sources used in brachytherapy,
such as thin wires, ribbons, capsules or seeds,
come in small sealed containers. Some sources
are placed permanently and remain in the body
after their radiation has been expended and the
source is no longer radioactive. Other sources
are placed temporarily inside the body and removed
after the prescribed dose has been delivered.
Interstitial implants are performed when a needle
or other invasive device is used to place the
source into the body, for example, prostate seed
implants or Mammosite treatment of breast cancer.
Intracavitary implants are performed when the
body’s natural cavities hold the radiation
source, for example, gynecologic implants or lung
implants using the patient’s airways. The
following implant procedures are available at
Saint Joseph’s:
- Prostate
Seed Implant - an option for the
treatment of prostate cancer. An outpatient
procedure performed under general or local anesthesia,
most patients return home the same day.
Radioactive iodine (I-125) and palladium (Pd-103)
sources are used; Prostate seed implants can
be used alone (monotherapy) or combined with
external beam therapy.
- Mammosite®
radiation therapy system –for
treatment of breast cancer and delivers radiation
from inside the breast directly to the tissue
where cancer is most likely to recur.
Requires surgical placement of the MammoSite®
catheter into the lumpectomy site. Treatment
is generally completed in five days. Saint Joseph’s
radiation oncologists are one of the first to
offer this treatment option and have treated
more patients than any other practice in the
Southeast.
For more information about Saint Joseph’s
Center
for Cancer Care and Research, call 404-851-7117.