Abstract:Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy(TAO)is the most common orbital disease in adults, and its incidence is increasing year by year. The clinical manifestations include proptosis, eyelid retraction, ocular motility disturbance and visual impairment, which seriously damage the physical and mental health of patients. Treatment options for TAO mainly include glucocorticoids, radiotherapy and orbital decompression. Among them, the glucocorticoids are the mainstay of treatment for moderate-to-severe and active disease; Orbital decompression is mainly for patients with severe proptosis and increased orbital pressure leading to optic nerve compression injury; And radiotherapy is used for TAO patients who are intolerant of glucocorticoids and who refuse orbital decompression. Radiation therapy can effectively improve the clinical symptoms of patients by exerting a non-specific anti-inflammatory effect, and it is an important means of treating TAO. With the continuous update of computer technology and medical imaging, radiotherapy techniques have developed rapidly. The emergence of three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy technology and intensity-modulated radiotherapy technology has made it possible to locate the lesions accurately. Recently, a large number of clinical results show that radiotherapy for TAO has good curative effects and manageable adverse reactions. This article reviews the mechanism of action, technical characteristic, clinical protocol, radiation dose parameter selection and complications of radiotherapy for TAO, in order to provide clinical reference for peers and formulate personalized TAO treatment plans.