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Treatment Option Overview
Treatment by type
There are treatments for all children with brain tumors. Three kinds of
treatment are used:
More than one method of treatment may be used, depending on the needs of the
patient.
Experienced doctors working together may provide the best treatment for
children with brain tumors. Your child’s treatment will often be coordinated
by a pediatric oncologist, a doctor who specializes in cancer in children. The
pediatric oncologist may refer your child to other specialists, such as a
pediatric neurosurgeon (a specialist in childhood brain surgery), a pediatric neurologist, a psychologist, a radiation oncologist, and other doctors who
specialize in the type of treatment your child requires.
Treatment options often depend on the type of tumor and its location within the
brain. Complete or near complete removal of the tumor is often possible. If
the tumor cannot be completely removed, radiation therapy and/or chemotherapy
may also be given.
Radiation therapy uses high-energy radiation from x-rays and other sources to
kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation therapy for childhood brain
tumors usually comes from a machine outside the body (external radiation
therapy). For some types of brain tumors, clinical trials are evaluating
radiation therapy given in several small doses per day (hyperfractionated
radiation therapy). Since radiation therapy can affect growth and brain
development, other clinical trials are testing ways to decrease or delay
radiation therapy, especially for younger children who have not yet achieved
full growth.
Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy drugs may
be taken by mouth or injected into a vein (intravenous) or muscle.
Chemotherapy is called a systemic treatment because the drug enters the
bloodstream, travels through the body, and can kill cancer cells throughout the
body. Chemotherapy is being studied in clinical trials as a means of delaying,
modifying or eliminating the need for radiation therapy in younger patients, as
well as for use prior to or during radiation therapy.
Treatment by type
Treatment for childhood brain tumor depends on the type and grade of the tumor,
its location within the brain, and your child’s age and overall health.
Your child may receive treatment that is considered standard based on its
effectiveness in a number of patients in past studies, or you may choose to
have your child enter a clinical trial. Not all patients are cured with standard therapy and some standard treatments may have more side effects than
are desired. For these reasons, clinical trials are designed to test new
treatments and to find better ways to treat people with cancer. Clinical
trials are ongoing in most parts of the country for childhood brain tumors.
For more information, call the Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4-CANCER
(1-800-422-6237); TTY at 1-800-332-8615.
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