Definition
Brachytherapy is a form of internal radiation therapy in which a radioactive source is placed directly inside or next to a tumor.
- “Brachy” = short distance; it delivers high-dose radiation locally while sparing surrounding healthy tissues.
Types
- Intracavitary
- Radioactive source placed in a body cavity (e.g., cervix, uterus, vagina).
- Interstitial
- Surface (or contact) therapy
- Applied to skin or superficial tumors.
Dose Regimens
- High-dose rate (HDR): Short, intense doses over minutes; outpatient treatment.
- Low-dose rate (LDR): Continuous radiation over hours to days; may require hospitalization.
- Pulse-dose rate (PDR): Intermittent radiation pulses, combining features of HDR and LDR.
Indications
- Gynecologic cancers: Cervical, endometrial, vaginal.
- Prostate cancer
- Breast cancer (partial breast irradiation)
- Head and neck cancers
- Selected soft tissue or skin malignancies
Advantages
- High precision → spares nearby normal tissues.
- Shorter treatment duration compared to external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) for HDR.
- Can be used alone or as a boost after EBRT.
Pharmacy & Clinical Considerations
- Radiation safety: Staff and patient exposure considerations.
- Adjunctive therapy: Often combined with chemotherapy (e.g., cisplatin in cervical cancer).
- Supportive care: Antiemetics, pain management, and management of local tissue reactions.
- Monitoring: Acute and late toxicities (e.g., mucositis, urinary symptoms, proctitis).
Toxicities
- Local: Pain, erythema, edema, ulceration, mucositis.
- Organ-specific: Bladder irritation, bowel toxicity, vaginal stenosis (gynecologic cases).
- Systemic: Minimal compared to external beam radiation.
Synonyms
BT

