Radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal cancer

Radiation therapy uses high-energy rays or particles to destroy cancer cells. Almost all people with nasopharyngeal cancer have radiation therapy. Your healthcare team will consider your personal needs to plan the type and amount of radiation, and when and how it is given. You may also receive other treatments.

Radiation therapy is often combined with chemotherapy to treat nasopharyngeal cancer. This is called chemoradiation. The 2 treatments are given during the same time period. The chemotherapy makes the radiation more effective.

Radiation therapy is given for different reasons. You may have radiation therapy or chemoradiation:

  • as the main treatment for tumours of the nasopharynx and to destroy the cancer cells in the neck area
  • to relieve pain or control the symptoms of advanced nasopharyngeal cancer (called palliative therapy)

The types of radiation therapy most commonly used to treat nasopharyngeal cancer are external radiation therapy and brachytherapy.

Before treatment

Talk to your healthcare team to find out what you need to do before radiation therapy begins. They may discuss any or all of the following, depending on your personal needs.

Quitting smoking

Smoking during treatment may make radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal cancer less effective. Smoking may also make side effects from radiation therapy worse.

If you smoke, your healthcare team will talk to you about how they can help you quit before starting radiation therapy.

Visiting your dentist

It is important to have a complete dental exam before radiation therapy begins to prevent dental problems. Your dentist will determine if you need to have any dental work done before treatment can start, such as having unhealthy teeth removed. They will also develop a dental care plan for you to follow after radiation therapy.

Getting fitted for an immobilization mask

Many people have a custom immobilization mask made before external radiation therapy is given to the head and neck. The mask makes sure that you don’t move during treatment and that radiation is directed at exactly the same place each time. You will need to wear it during treatment planning and all radiation treatments.

Making sure your nutritional needs are met

You may have a gastrostomy tube (G-tube) placed before having radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal cancer. A G-tube is a feeding tube that is passed through the skin into the stomach. A G-tube will let foods and liquids pass directly into your stomach (called enteral feeding) when you find it too difficult to eat or drink. G-tubes can be placed using a flexible scope that goes through your mouth or nose, guided by an x-ray, or by creating a small surgical opening from your skin into your stomach.

Radiation therapy to the head and neck can make swallowing difficult and painful, so a gastrostomy tube can help make sure you will get the nutrition you need.

Find out more about tube feeding.

Protecting your ears

Radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal cancer can cause nerve damage or fluid buildup in the middle ear. This can affect your hearing, so it is important to protect your ears as much as possible.

Your healthcare team may place tubes in one or both of your ears before radiation starts. These tubes drain fluid and air from the middle ear. They usually fall out on their own, but the healthcare team might have to remove them after treatment in some cases.

Checking your thyroid and pituitary glands

Both the thyroid and pituitary glands may be in the area treated with radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal cancer. Radiation can affect these structures, so the healthcare team takes special care to protect them during treatment. They will also do blood tests before, during and after radiation therapy to check how well the thyroid and pituitary glands are working.

External radiation therapy

During external radiation therapy, a machine directs radiation through the skin to the tumour and some of the tissue around it. It is usually given to the main tumour and nearby lymph nodes in the neck (cervical lymph nodes) because nasopharyngeal cancer often spreads to these lymph nodes. Radiation will be directed at cervical lymph nodes even if the cancer doesn’t seem to have spread to them. This helps prevent the cancer from coming back (recurring) in the neck.

External radiation therapy is usually given once a day for 5 days a week over a period of 5 to 7 weeks. The healthcare team will take care to protect the surrounding tissues from the radiation as much as possible. These tissues include the eyes, brain stem, tongue, spinal cord, salivary glands, thyroid gland and pituitary gland.

There are different types of external radiation therapy that may be used to treat nasopharyngeal cancer.

3D conformal radiation therapy (3D CRT) delivers radiation to the tumour from different directions. The radiation beams are all the same strength.

Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) uses computer-generated images to deliver radiation directly to the tumour or lymph nodes from many different angles. A higher dose can be given to the tumour while the normal tissues near the tumour get less radiation. It may be used for nasopharyngeal cancer when there is little risk that cancer cells have spread into the surrounding tissue.

Stereotactic radiosurgery delivers one large dose of radiation to a tumour as a single treatment, called a single fraction. It doesn’t involve surgery. It may be given as a boost after external radiation therapy or chemoradiation for recurrent tumours.

Brachytherapy

Brachytherapy is internal radiation therapy. It uses a radioactive material called a radioactive isotope. It is placed right into the tumour or very close to it. Radioactive materials can also be placed in the area where the tumour was removed. The radiation kills the cancer cells over time.

Brachytherapy may be used to treat a small, early stage nasopharyngeal tumour or for nasopharyngeal cancer that comes back after external radiation therapy. It may also be given as a boost along with external radiation.

Side effects

Side effects can happen with any type of treatment for nasopharyngeal cancer, but everyone’s experience is different. Some people have many side effects. Other people have few or none at all.

During radiation therapy, the healthcare team protects healthy cells in the treatment area as much as possible. But damage to healthy cells happens and causes side effects. Side effects can happen any time during, immediately after or a few days or weeks after radiation therapy. Most severe side effects do not occur until 3 to 4 weeks into therapy. Sometimes late side effects develop months or years after radiation therapy. Many side effects go away on their own or can be treated, but some side effects are permanent.

Side effects of radiation therapy will depend mainly on the size of the area being treated, the specific area or organs being treated, the total dose of radiation, whether chemotherapy is given at the same time (chemoradiation) and the treatment schedule. Chemotherapy makes the radiation more effective in killing cancer cells, but it also makes the side effects from radiation worse.

Some common side effects of radiation therapy used for nasopharyngeal cancer are:

Tell your healthcare team if you have these side effects or others you think might be from radiation therapy. The sooner you tell them of any problems, the sooner they can suggest ways to help you deal with them.

Questions to ask about radiation therapy

Find out more about radiation therapy and side effects of radiation therapy. To make the decisions that are right for you, ask your healthcare team questions about radiation therapy.

Expert review and references

  • American Cancer Society. Treating Nasopharyngeal Cancer. 2022.
  • Guideline Resource Unit (GURU). Nasopharyngeal Cancer Treatment. Version 2 ed. Edmonton: Alberta Health Services; 2021: Clinical Practice Guideline HN-003. https://www.albertahealthservices.ca/info/cancerguidelines.aspx.
  • Bossi P, Chan AT, Licitra L, Trama A, Orlandi A, et al. Nasopharyngeal carcinoma:ESMO-EURACAN Clinical Practice Guidelines for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up. Annals of Oncology. 2021: 32(4) 452-465.
  • Chua MLK, Lechner M, Ma BBY. Cancer of the nasopharynx. DeVita VT Jr, Lawrence TS, Rosenberg S. eds. DeVita Hellman and Rosenberg's Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology. 12th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer; 2023: Kindle version, chapter 24, https://read.amazon.ca/?asin=B0BG3DPT4Q&language=en-CA.
  • National Comprehensive Cancer Network . NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Head and Neck Cancer Version 2.2023 . 2023: https://www.nccn.org/guidelines/category_1.
  • PDQ® Adult Treatment Editorial Board. Nasopharyngeal Cancer Treatment (Adult) (PDQ®) – Health Professional. Bethesda, MD: National Cancer Institute; 2022: https://www.cancer.gov/.

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