Procedure ยท Radiation

Radiotherapy in skin cancer

Radiotherapy (RT) is a versatile modality in skin oncology โ€” definitive treatment for inoperable disease, adjuvant after high-risk surgery, palliation in advanced disease. UK practice typically uses superficial X-rays, electrons or photons depending on tumour depth and site; brachytherapy has a niche role.

CurrentLast reviewed 25 March 2026

Indications

Definitive RT (no surgery)

  • BCC or cSCC where surgery is unsuitable (elderly, comorbidity, refusal, anticoagulation, anatomical complexity).
  • Lentigo maligna where surgery declined / unsuitable (Grenz rays, superficial X-rays).
  • Locally advanced cSCC unsuitable for surgery and ineligible for cemiplimab.

Adjuvant RT (after surgery)

  • cSCC: perineural invasion of named nerve, close / positive margin without further surgery, multiple involved nodes, extracapsular spread.
  • BCC: close / positive margin not amenable to re-excision; recurrent BCC after Mohs in selected cases.
  • Merkel cell carcinoma: adjuvant RT to primary site significantly reduces local recurrence; nodal RT for SLN-positive disease where completion dissection not undertaken.
  • Melanoma: adjuvant nodal RT considered for ECE or multiple nodes (less common in immunotherapy era).
  • DFSP: adjuvant RT for positive margin where re-excision not feasible.

Palliative RT

  • Cutaneous metastases โ€” symptomatic bleeding, pain, ulceration.
  • Bone metastases (melanoma, MCC).
  • Brain metastases โ€” stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for melanoma metastases.

Modalities

ModalityDepthTypical use
Superficial X-rays (50โ€“100 kV)~5 mmBCC / cSCC โ‰ค5 mm depth on flat surfaces
Electrons (4โ€“18 MeV)1โ€“5 cmBCC / cSCC of the head and neck, deeper tumours, post-op boost
Photons (megavoltage)DeepNodal basin RT, deep cSCC, metastatic disease
BrachytherapySurface contactSelected periorbital and ear lesions; lip vermilion
Grenz rays / soft X-rays~0.5 mmLentigo maligna where surgery declined

Fractionation regimens

  • BCC / cSCC examples from RCR 2024: 32.5โ€“35 Gy in 4โ€“5 fractions for small lesions; 45 Gy in 10 fractions; 50 Gy in 15โ€“20 fractions; 55 Gy in 20 fractions; or 60 Gy in 30 fractions for large fields or areas of poorer radiation tolerance.
  • Adjuvant / complex head and neck cSCC: usually individualised at clinical oncology MDT, commonly using more protracted schedules when field size, nerve pathways, nodal basins or organ-at-risk constraints require it.
  • Palliative treatment: hypofractionated or single-fraction approaches may be used for bleeding, pain, ulceration or fungation; dose depends on intent, prognosis, field size and local radiotherapy protocol.
  • Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS): single high-dose fraction for melanoma brain metastases.

Side effects

Acute (during and 0โ€“6 weeks after)

  • Erythema, dry / moist desquamation.
  • Mucositis (head and neck fields).
  • Alopecia in field.
  • Fatigue.

Late (months to years)

  • Atrophy, telangiectasia, pigmentary change.
  • Permanent alopecia in field.
  • Dry eye / cataract (periocular fields).
  • Osteoradionecrosis (rare).
  • Second primary tumours in field โ€” including new BCC and cSCC.
ImportantAvoid radiotherapy in Gorlin syndrome

RT can trigger numerous new BCCs within irradiated fields in Gorlin syndrome. Avoid where a surgical or non-radiotherapy alternative exists, and discuss extensively with the patient, clinical oncology and clinical genetics if RT is being considered.

Practical

  • Refer via skin cancer MDT to the appropriate radiotherapy centre (clinical oncology service).
  • Skin care during RT: gentle moisturiser, avoid friction, sun protection of treated field for life.
  • Counsel about late effects, especially in younger patients.
  • Combined modality therapy (e.g. concurrent cetuximab + RT for advanced cSCC) is occasionally used in specialist centres.

References

  1. Veness MJ et al. Radiotherapy in non-melanoma skin cancer. J Med Imaging Radiat Oncol; 2007.
  2. Nestor MS et al. Treatment of non-melanoma skin cancer with image-guided superficial radiation therapy. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol; 2015.
  3. National Comprehensive Cancer Network. NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: Squamous Cell Skin Cancer. Radiotherapy section used as an international cross-reference for UK practice; accessed 18 May 2026.

Spot a correction?

If any clinical statement, citation or link on this page needs updating, please email admin@skinoncology.net with the page name, the proposed correction and the supporting source.