Abstract

Radiotherapy after breast conserving surgery and mastectomy with node positive disease has been shown to reduce risk of recurrence and mortality in the treatment of breast cancer. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) after conservative surgery offers several advantages over conventional RT including improved acute and late toxicity and quality of life (QoL). We undertook this study to prospectively evaluate acute (≤90 days after last dose of radiotherapy) and long-term (>90 days) cutaneous, esophageal, and fibrosis toxicity and QoL in breast cancer patients treated by adjuvant IMRT after breast surgery. We included patients with complex volumes for which 3D RT does not allow a good coverage of target volumes and sparing organs at risk. We report here an interim analysis with a median follow-up of 13.1 months (range, 6.5–25.9 months). Most of the acute toxicity was cutaneous (95.9%) and oesophageal (59.6%), and mostly grade 1 and 2. Medium-term cutaneous toxicity rate was 25.6%, and mostly grade 1. Medium-term esophageal toxicity was rare (1.8%). In this series acute oesophageal toxicity was found to be associated with dosimetric factors. QoL was well preserved throughout the study, and aesthetic outcomes were good. Based on these data, tomotherapy may be a favorable alternative to other techniques in patients needing a complex irradiation of the breast and lymph node volumes.

Highlights

  • Radiotherapy is recommended after breast conserving surgery and mastectomy with node positive disease in the treatment of breast cancer

  • Three recent randomized trials have demonstrated that intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) after conservative surgery offers several advantages over conventional RT including improved acute and late breast toxicity and quality of life (QoL)[9,10,11,12,13]

  • The median dose prescribed to the breast/chest wall/axillary nodes planning target volume (PTV) was 50 Gy and a median simultaneous boost to the surgical bed of 10 Gy

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Summary

Introduction

Radiotherapy is recommended after breast conserving surgery and mastectomy with node positive disease in the treatment of breast cancer. Three recent randomized trials have demonstrated that intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) after conservative surgery offers several advantages over conventional RT including improved acute and late breast toxicity and quality of life (QoL)[9,10,11,12,13]. These trials, suffered from some limitations: included patients had an early stage breast cancer; treatment in the control arm was 2D-CRT, which is no longer the therapeutic standard; intervention in the experimental arm constituted a simplified IMRT technique; and few data were reported on local control and none on survival or late toxicity other than aesthetics. Secondary objectives were to analyze the association between clinical and dosimetric characteristics and toxicity, to evaluate QoL and aesthetic outcomes, and to compare the toxicity of the different delineation protocols used

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