Acta oncologica
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Re-irradiation of previously treated areas may become necessary for recurrent cancer, new primary tumours (common in head and neck cancer patients), or nodal and metastatic disease. Factors that should be taken into account in the decision to re-treat include: 1) previously treated volume (how much overlap is there with new treatment fields) and dose fractionation schedule; 2) which critical tissues or organs are at risk; 3) how much time has elapsed since first treatment; 4) whether there are any practical alternatives to re-irradiation? Rapidly proliferating tissues generally recover well from the initial radiotherapy and will tolerate re-irradiation to almost full doses. Some slowly proliferating tissues are also capable of partial proliferative and functional recovery, although this takes several months and some residual damage remains. ⋯ Re-treatment schedules with curative intent require a high re-treatment dose, which is accompanied by an increased risk of normal tissue damage. To minimize serious complications, re-irradiation schedules require the best possible treatment planning (conformal therapy where possible). Hyperfractionation or a combination of external beam and brachytherapy could also be beneficial.