Find a Clinical Trial Find out about new research studies for cervical cancer 
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Brachytherapy
At Memorial Sloan-Kettering, we have vast clinical experience in combined modality therapy (combination chemotherapy and radiation therapy), including brachytherapy. In high-dose brachytherapy, radioactive material is applied directly to the tumor. Brachytherapy is used in combination with intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), a type of external beam radiation which allows more precise treatment planning and the ability to deliver higher radiation doses with greater safety. With IMRT, radiation therapists can shape pencil-thin radiation beams of varying intensity to conform to specific tumor shapes and sizes, reducing the dosage of radiation to healthy tissues and possibly the side effects of treatment.
Advanced Cervical Cancer (Stages IIB-IVA)
If cervical cancer has spread beyond the cervix and into the surrounding pelvic tissues, surgery alone is usually not an effective cure. Patients with this degree of invasive cancer have traditionally also been treated with radiation therapy (the use of x-rays or other high-energy waves to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors), either alone or in addition to surgery.
In recent years, however, there has been a major shift in the treatment of advanced cervical cancer. Based on the results of large clinical trials, the standard of care for regionally advanced cervical cancer is now chemotherapy combined with radiation therapy. The radiation therapy may be delivered externally and/or internally through brachytherapy (by applying radioactive material directly to the cervix).
When chemotherapy drugs (such as cisplatin) are given with radiation therapy, the tumors are made more sensitive to the effects of the radiation. This combined action improves the survival of advanced cervical patients dramatically -- by as much as 30 to 50 percent. Nearly all patients with invasive cervical cancer can benefit from this combination of radiation therapy and chemotherapy.
Stage IVB & Recurrent Cervical Cancer
For women whose cancer spreads beyond the pelvis (into the lungs or liver, for example) or who have recurrent disease, treatment is aimed at reducing cancer-related symptoms in order to improve a patient's quality of life, and hopefully to prolong her survival.
Chemotherapy is the primary modality of treatment for these patients, and several drugs, such as cisplatin and paclitaxel, are available. Treatment of this group of women -- with a focus on new chemotherapy drugs and combinations of drugs -- remains a major research priority at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Some women with recurrent cervical cancer may choose an extensive surgery known as pelvic exenteration, which requires Memorial Sloan-Kettering's gynecologic surgeons to remove cancerous tissue and reconstruct the remaining organs so the patient retains optimal function. This is an extremely radical procedure reserved for patients with limited treatment options. Pelvic exenteration may be combined with intraoperative brachytherapy. This radiation -- administered directly to any remaining cancer cells -- can only be given in specialized operating rooms, available at hospitals such as Memorial Sloan-Kettering.
Because this procedure is physically and emotionally demanding, investigators at Memorial Sloan-Kettering have initiated a trial to learn more about the physical, emotional, educational, and sexual needs of women treated with pelvic exenteration.