Abstract

BackgroundBreast/chest wall irradiation (RT) increases risk of cardiovascular death. International Quantitative Analysis of Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic (QUANTEC) guidelines state for partial heart irradiation a “V25Gy <10% will be associated with a <1% probability of cardiac mortality” in long-term follow-up after RT. We assessed whether women treated with breast/chest wall RT 10-years ago who died of cardiovascular disease (CVD) violated QUANTEC guidelines. Materials/methodsA population-based database identified all cardiovascular deaths in women with early-stage breast cancer <80 years, treated with adjuvant breast/chest wall RT from 2002 to 2006. Ten-year rate of cardiovascular death was calculated using a Kaplan-Meier method. Patients were matched on a 2:1 basis with controls that did not die of CVD. For left-sided cases, the heart and left anterior descending (LAD) artery were retrospectively delineated. Dose-volume histograms were calculated, and heart V25Gy compared to QUANTEC guidelines. Results5249 eligible patients received breast/chest wall RT from 2002 to 2006: 76 (1.4% at 10-years) died of CVD by June 2015. Forty-two patients received left-sided RT (1.7% CVD death at 10-years), 34 right-sided RT (1.3% at 10-years). Heart V25Gy did not exceed 10% in any left-sided cases. No cardiac dosimetry parameter distinguished left-sided cases from controls. ConclusionsQUANTEC guidelines were not violated in any patient that died of CVD after left-sided RT. The risk of radiation induced cardiac death at 10-years appears to be very low if MHD is <3.3 Gy and maximum LAD dose (EQD23 Gy) is <45.4 Gy. Further studies are needed to evaluate heart and LAD constraints in the CT-planning era.

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