Treatment goals depend on the patient and other factors. The goal may be cure or relief of symptoms.
Radiation kills brain cancer cells directly or interferes with their growth. Two types of radiation therapy are available.
Chemotherapy is recommended for spinal fluid metastases and is still under investigation for use against metastatic brain tumours. If the primary tumour is hormone dependent, hormones or hormone-blocking drugs may be used. Breast cancers that are oestrogen-receptor-positive are treated with tamoxifen which may also shrink the metastatic tumours. Prostate cancer metastases may also be treated by hormones. Steroids may be effective in patients with lymphoma.
Steroids such as Dexamethazone, act rapidly to decrease the symptoms of raised intracranial pressure due to brain swelling that accompanies metastatic brain tumours but do not kill the tumour cells. Improvement is noticeable within six to twenty four hours. This therapy is effective in sixty to eighty percent of patients with metastatic brain tumours. Steroids are frequently prescribed during the course of radiation therapy to reduce the swelling caused by radiation.
Steroid use is monitored by the doctor because of its potential side effects e.g., gastric pain and haemorrhage, aggravation of diabetes mellitus and reduced ability of the body to fight infection etc.
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