A specialized team of doctors advises and assists individuals throughout treatment and rehabilitation. These doctors may include:
- A neuro-oncologist is a neurologist or oncologist who specializes in CNS tumors.
- An oncologist is a doctor who specializes in cancer.
- A neurologist is a doctor who specializes in CNS disorders.
- A neuroradiologist is a doctor who specializes in the CNS and is trained in reading diagnostic imaging results.
- A pathologist is a clinical doctor who diagnoses diseases of tissues or cells using a variety of laboratory tests.
- A neurosurgeon is a brain or spinal cord surgeon. Specialized training in removal of central nervous system tumors may have been completed.
- A radiation oncologist is a doctor who specializes in using radiation to treat cancer.
Your health care team will recommend a treatment plan based on the tumor's location, type, size and aggressiveness, as well as medical history, age, and general health. Malignant tumors require some form of treatment, while some small benign tumors may need only monitoring. Treatment for a brain or spinal tumor can include surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or a combination of treatments.
Initial treatment for a CNS tumor may involve a variety of drugs to treat or ease symptoms, including:
- anticonvulsants to treat or prevent seizures
- pain medications
- steroids or other anti-inflammatory drugs to reduce swelling and improve blood flow
- antidepressants to treat anxiety or depression that might occur following a tumor diagnosis
- anti-nausea drugs
Neurosurgery
Surgery is usually the first treatment to both obtain tissue for diagnosis and remove as much tumor as can be done safely. Surgery may be the only treatment you need if your tumor is considered benign or low grade. Based on the type and grade (low versus high), doctors often recommend follow-up treatment, including radiation and chemotherapy, or an experimental treatment. You will be referred to the specialists above to provide guidance on this treatment.
Surgery is usually the first step in treating an accessible tumor—one that can be removed without risk of neurological damage. Many low-grade tumors and secondary (metastatic) cancerous tumors can be removed entirely. Some tumors have a clearly defined shape and can be removed more easily. Your surgeon will try removing (called resecting or excising) all or as much tumor as possible. For malignant CNS tumors, this is best performed by a neurosurgeon.
An inaccessible or inoperable tumor is one that cannot be removed surgically because of the risk of severe nervous system damage during the operation. These tumors are frequently located deep within the brain or near vital structures such as the brain stem and may not have well-defined edges. In these cases, a biopsy may be performed.
A biopsy is sometimes performed to diagnose and help doctors determine how to treat a tumor. Biopsies can sometimes be performed by inserting a needle through a small hole in the body and taking a small piece of the tumor tissue. A pathologist will examine the tissue for certain changes that signal cancer and determine its stage or grade.
In some cases, a surgeon may need to insert a shunt into the skull to drain any dangerous buildup of CSF caused by the tumor. A shunt is a flexible plastic tube that is used to divert the flow of CSF from the central nervous system to another part of the body, where it can be absorbed as part of the normal circulatory process.
During surgery, some tools used in the operating room include a surgical microscope, the endoscope (a small viewing tube attached to a video camera), and miniature precision instruments that allow surgery to be performed through a small incision in the brain or spine. Other tools include:
- Intraoperative MRI uses a special type of MRI to provide real-time monitoring and evaluation of the surgery. Constantly updated images let doctors see how much of the tumor has been removed.
- Navigation equipment used in computer-guided, or stereotactic, neurosurgery gives doctors a precise, three-dimensional map of the spine or brain as the operation progresses. A computer uses pre-operative diagnostic images to reduce the risk of damage to surrounding tissue.
- Intraoperative nerve monitoring tests use real-time recordings of nerve cell activity to determine the role of specific nerves and to monitor brain activity as the surgery progresses. Some surgeries may be done while the individual is awake under monitored anesthesia care, rather than under general anesthesia. This allows doctors to monitor the individual's speech and motor functions as a tumor is being removed.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy usually involves repeated doses of high-energy beams such as x-rays or protons to kill cancer cells or keep them from multiplying. Radiation therapy can shrink the tumor mass. It can be used to treat surgically inaccessible tumors or tumor cells that may remain following surgery.
Radiation treatment can be delivered externally, using focused beams of energy or charged particles that are directed at the tumor, or from inside the body, using a surgically implanted device. The stronger the radiation, the deeper it can penetrate to the target site Healthy cells may also be damaged by radiation therapy, but current radiation treatment is designed to minimize injury to normal tissue.
Treatment often begins soon after surgery and may continue for several weeks. Depending on the tumor type and location, a person may be able to receive a modified form of therapy to lessen damage to healthy cells and improve the overall treatment.
Externally delivered radiation therapy poses no risk of radioactivity to the person or family and friends. Types of external radiation therapy include:
- Whole brain radiation is generally used to shrink multiple cancerous tumors, rather than to target individual tumors. It may be given as the sole form of treatment or in advance of other forms of radiation therapy and microsurgery.
- Conventional external beam radiation aims a uniform dose of high-energy radiation at the tumor and surrounding tissue. It is used to treat large tumors or those that may have spread into surrounding tissue.
- Three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) uses diagnostic imaging to prepare an accurate, computer-generated three-dimensional image of the tumor and surrounding tissue. The computer then coordinates and sends multiple beams of radiation to the tumor's exact location, sparing nearby organs and surrounding tissue.
- Intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is similar to 3D-CRT but varies in the intensity of the hundreds of radiation beams to deliver more precise doses to the tumor or its specific areas, with less exposure to surrounding tissue.
- Hyperfractionation involves giving two or more smaller amounts of radiation a day instead of a larger, single dose. It can deliver more radiation to certain tumors and reduce damage to normal cells.
- Proton beam therapy directs a beam of high-energy protons directly at the tumor site, without spread of the radiation beyond the target. The dosing is similar to standard radiation (also called photon radiation), but proton beam radiation is best for treating tumors near important structures such as the brain stem and spinal cord. Proton beam therapy can be used as a stand-alone treatment or in combination with chemotherapy or as follow-up to surgery.
Radiosurgery
Radiosurgery is usually a one-time treatment using multiple, sharply focused radiation beams aimed at the brain or spinal cord tumor from multiple angles. It does not cut into the person but, like other forms of radiation therapy, harms a tumor cell's ability to grow and divide. It is commonly used to treat surgically inaccessible tumors and may be used at the end of conventional radiation treatment. Two common radiosurgery procedures are:
- Linear-accelerated radiosurgery (LINAC) uses radar-like technology to prepare and fire a single beam of high-energy x-rays into the tumor. Also called high linear-energy transfer radiation, LINAC forms the beam to match the tumor's shape, avoiding surrounding tissue. A special machine that rotates around the head then fires a uniform dose of radiation into the tumor.
- Radiosurgery can be given by a number of techniques, all designed to provide a precise dose of radiation to a small area. It has proven beneficial for tumors that do not spread into the surrounding brain, but radiosurgery is less beneficial for the common brain tumors that do spread into the brain.
Side effects of radiation: Side effects of radiation therapy vary from person to person and are usually temporary. They typically begin about two weeks after treatment starts and may include fatigue, nausea, vomiting, reddened or sore skin in the treated area, headache, hearing loss, problems with sleep, and hair loss (although the hair usually grows back once the treatment has stopped). Radiation therapy in young children, particularly those age three years or younger, can cause problems with learning, processing information, thinking, and growing.
There are late side effects of radiation that may occur months to years after treatment that include shrinkage (atrophy) of the brain or spinal cord region that was treated.
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy uses powerful drugs to kill cancer cells or stop them from growing or spreading. These drugs are usually given orally, intravenously, or through a catheter or port and travel through the body to the cancerous cells. Your oncologist will recommend a treatment plan based on the type of cancer, drug(s) to be used, the frequency of administration, and the number of cycles needed. Chemotherapy is given in cycles to more effectively damage and kill cancer cells and give normal cells time to recover from any damage.
You might receive chemotherapy to shrink the tumor before surgery called neo-adjuvant therapy (a first step treatment to shrink a tumor before the primary treatment). Radiation therapy can also be given as neo-adjuvant therapy. After surgery, or radiation treatment if radiation is the primary treatment, chemotherapy could be called adjuvant therapy (treatment in addition to the primary treatment). Metronomic therapy involves continuous low-dose chemotherapy to block mechanisms that stimulate the growth of new blood vessels needed to feed the tumor.
Not all tumors are vulnerable to the same anticancer drugs, so your treatment may include a combination of drugs. Common CNS chemotherapies include temozolomide, carmustine (also called BCNU), lomustine (also called CCNU), and bevacizumab. Be sure to discuss all options with your medical team.
Side effects of chemotherapy may include hair loss, nausea, digestive problems, reduced bone marrow production, and fatigue. The treatment can also harm normal cells that are growing or dividing at the same time, but these cells usually recover and side effects often improve or stop once the treatment has ended.
Targeted therapy
Targeted therapy is a cancer treatment that uses drugs to target specific genes and proteins that are involved in tumor cell growth. This helps slow uncontrolled growth and reduce the production of tumor cells. Targeted therapies include oncogenes, growth factors, and molecules aimed at blocking gene activity.
Alternative and complementary approaches
Alternative and complementary approaches may help you or other individuals with a tumor better cope with the diagnosis and treatment. Some of these therapies, however, may be harmful if used during or after cancer treatment and should be discussed in advance with a doctor. Common approaches include nutritional and herbal supplements, vitamins, special diets, and mental or physical techniques to reduce stress.