Abstract

In well-selected patients who choose to pursue breast conservation therapy (BCT) for early-stage breast cancer, partial breast irradiation (PBI) delivered externally or intraoperatively, may be a viable alternative to conventional whole breast irradiation. Two large, contemporary randomized trials have demonstrated breast intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) to be noninferior to whole breast external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) when assessing for ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence in select patients. Additionally, IORT and other PBI techniques are likely to be more widely adopted in the future because they improve patient convenience by offering an accelerated course of treatment. Coupled with these novel techniques for breast radiotherapy (RT) are distinct toxicity profiles and unique cosmetic alterations that differ from conventional breast EBRT and have the potential to impact disease surveillance and patient satisfaction. This paper will review the level-one evidence for treatment efficacy as well as important secondary endpoints like RT toxicity, breast cosmesis, quality of life, patient satisfaction, and surveillance mammography following BCT with IORT.

Highlights

  • Modern, randomized trials investigating breast conservation therapy (BCT) for early-stage breast cancer have shown that radiotherapy (RT) cannot be omitted in any subgroup of breast cancer patients without compromising local control [1,2,3]

  • intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) is challenging the current standard in BCT in a selected patient population who are at low risk of local recurrences (LR) and who are suitable for partial breast irradiation (PBI) [13]

  • The purpose of this review is to explore the manner in which IORT may impact important and lasting BCT endpoints like local control, RT toxicity, cosmetic outcome, quality of life (QOL), and surveillance mammography

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Summary

Introduction

Modern, randomized trials investigating breast conservation therapy (BCT) for early-stage breast cancer have shown that radiotherapy (RT) cannot be omitted in any subgroup of breast cancer patients without compromising local control [1,2,3]. Various techniques for breast IORT have been used for two decades; high-level clinical data have only recently emerged from randomized trials [7,8,9]. Emerging evidence demonstrates the noninferiority of this method and IORT may become more widely adopted with commensurate impact on the outcomes of BCT. The purpose of this review is to explore the manner in which IORT may impact important and lasting BCT endpoints like local control, RT toxicity, cosmetic outcome, quality of life (QOL), and surveillance mammography

Randomized Evidence for Breast IORT
Breast IORT Leaves Its Mark
Surveillance
20 Gy kV photons
Cosmetic Outcomes
Is There Quality with Convenience?
Findings
Conclusions
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