Abstract
BackgroundIn early-stage breast cancer, the cornerstone of treatment is surgery. After breast-conserving surgery, adjuvant radiotherapy has shown to improve locoregional control and overall survival rates. The use of breast radiotherapy in the preoperative (preop) setting is far less common. Nevertheless, it might improve disease-free survival as compared to postoperative radiotherapy. There is also a possibility of downsizing the tumour which might lead to a lower need for mastectomy. There are some obstacles that complicate its introduction into daily practice. It may complicate surgery or lead to an increase in wound complications or delayed wound healing. Another fear of preop radiotherapy is delaying surgery for too long. At Ghent University Hospital, we have experience with a 5-fraction radiotherapy schedule allowing radiotherapy delivery in a very short time span.MethodsTwenty female breast cancer patients with non-metastatic disease receiving preop chemotherapy will be randomized between preop or postoperative radiotherapy. The feasibility of preop radiotherapy will be evaluated based on overall treatment time. All patients will be treated in 5 fractions of 5.7 Gy to the whole breast with a simultaneous integrated boost to the tumour/tumour bed of 5 × 6.2 Gy. In case of lymph node irradiation, the lymph node regions will receive a dose of 27 Gy in 5 fractions of 5.4 Gy. The total duration of therapy will be 10 to 12 days. In the preop group, overall treatment time is defined as the time between diagnosis and the day of last surgery, in the postop group between diagnosis and last irradiation fraction. Toxicity related to surgery, radio-, and chemotherapy will be evaluated on dedicated case-report forms at predefined time points. Tumour response will be evaluated on the pathology report and on MRI at baseline and in the interval between chemotherapy and surgery.DiscussionThe primary objective of the trial is to investigate the feasibility of preop radiotherapy. Secondary objectives are to search for biomarkers of response and toxicity and identify the involved cell death mechanisms and the effect of preop breast radiotherapy on the in-situ immune micro-environment.
Highlights
IntroductionAfter breast-conserving surgery, adjuvant radiotherapy has shown to improve locoregional control and overall survival rates
In early-stage breast cancer, the cornerstone of treatment is surgery
Evaluation of endpoints The feasibility of preop RT will be evaluated based on overall treatment time
Summary
After breast-conserving surgery, adjuvant radiotherapy has shown to improve locoregional control and overall survival rates. The use of breast radiotherapy in the preoperative (preop) setting is far less common. It might improve disease-free survival as compared to postoperative radiotherapy. In early-stage breast cancer, the cornerstone of treatment is surgery: either mastectomy (ME) or breastconserving surgery (BCS). After BCS, adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) has shown to improve locoregional control and overall survival rates. Adjuvant or postoperative (postop) CT is increasingly replaced by preoperative (preop) or neoadjuvant CT in patients with larger tumours to avoid mastectomy or tumours with a more aggressive phenotype (triple negative or HER2 amplified cancers) for early response assessment [3, 4]. Several randomized controlled trials demonstrated that there is no difference in overall survival whether CT is given pre- or postoperatively [5, 6]
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