Under physician review
Patient handout: Palliative Radiotherapy
Radiotherapy Step by Step โ Designed for radiation oncologists to use in clinic
Treatment aimed at relieving symptoms and improving quality of life, often in few sessions with limited side effects.
Why radiotherapy is used
- Palliative treatment does not necessarily aim to cure, but to relieve symptoms such as pain, bleeding, or pressure, and to improve your comfort and quality of life.
- It is often effective and fast, and given in fewer sessions than curative treatment.
- It is an important and compassionate option that has its place in your care plan โ not a giving up on treatment.
The area being treated
- The specific symptom-causing area (such as a painful bone, or a tumor causing bleeding or pressure).
- Treatment is directed to relieve the symptom with the least possible disruption.
- It may include more than one site if there are multiple symptoms.
How to prepare
- Keep taking your painkillers regularly, and tell the team if they are no longer enough so we can adjust them.
- Arrange someone to accompany you if you feel weak or fatigued.
- Do not hesitate to ask for support โ comfort and quality of life are a core goal here.
- Note your symptoms and their changes to help the team fine-tune treatment.
Early (acute) side effects
- Mild, local effects usually depending on the treated area.
- Temporary tiredness may occur.
- In bone treatment pain may briefly increase before it improves (a temporary flare) โ this is expected and managed with painkillers.
- Mild nausea if the area is near the abdomen.
Questions to ask your doctor
- What is the specific goal of this treatment (pain relief, stopping bleeding, reducing pressure)?
- When can I expect to feel improvement?
- How many sessions, and could it be a single session?
- What do I do if the pain increases after starting?
- How does this treatment fit with the rest of my care?
When to contact us immediately
- New weakness or numbness in the limbs, or difficulty controlling urination or bowels (emergency โ may indicate spinal cord compression)
- New severe pain not controlled by your usual medication
- Fever or signs of infection
- Heavy bleeding or severe breathlessness
If any of these appear, contact your treatment team immediately or go to the emergency department.