Abstract

Breast cancer (BC) treatment involves a multi-modal approach where surgical resection is the backbone of therapy. However, due to medical comorbidities precluding surgery, unresectable disease, or patient preference, some patients do not undergo surgery. In the absence of resection, it is paramount to improve local control (LC) of the primary tumor. To that end, this study explored the role of ablative RT dose delivered with SBRT. Between 2015-2022, 21 patients (10 metastatic, 11 stage IA-IIIC) received 23 SBRT courses to primary BC lesions without planned surgery at our institution. One patient had undergone whole breast RT 20 years prior to SBRT. 7 patients were analyzed retrospectively; 15 are currently enrolled in a prospective study. SBRT dose was 40 Gy/5 fractions delivered every other day. Follow-up imaging (PET, CT, MRI, MMG/US) was reviewed to evaluate the response. CTCAE v.3 was used to document any acute (≤3 months) and late toxicities. Kaplan-Meier curves were used to estimate local control (LC) and overall survival (OS). Median age was 78.4 (45.9-97.3) years. Median follow-up was 14.7 (3.3-70.3) months after RT completion. Initial post-treatment imaging was available for all cases and was performed at a median of 4.0 (0.6-11.9) months after SBRT. The median pre-SBRT index lesion size was 3.1 (0.5-14.5) cm and PTV was 32.4 (11.5-522.4) cc. At a median 4 months post-SBRT, the median decrease in index lesion size was 20.8 (0-100) % and SUV reduction was 65.2 (20.8-100) %. Further improvement was seen on the 2nd follow-up scans at a median 7.8 months post-SBRT, with 62 (0-100) % and 88 (33.3-100) % median reduction in the tumor size and SUV, respectively, compared to pre-SBRT values. The estimated LC rate was 100% at 6 months and 93.3% at 12 months. The sole case of local progression occurred 9.5 months after SBRT, after an initial interval decrease in the primary lesion. Among the patients with available systemic follow-up scans, regional progression occurred in 4 (17.4%) cases at a median 18.6 (5.2-22.7) months post-SBRT. Six (37.5%) patients developed distant progression at a median 4.8 (0.9-16.2) months, all of whom had metastatic disease at diagnosis. The estimated OS was 85.7% at 6 months and 63.8% at 12 months. Most patients tolerated the treatment well. There was no grade 4 toxicity. Complete acute toxicity data is presented in Table 1. Only one patient experienced late grade 2 breast edema. Based on our preliminary results, definitive SBRT to the primary BC appears to have a role in providing LC in the treatment of non-surgical patients and is well-tolerated. Since the disease progression tends to occur outside the treated primary tumor, additional approaches to improve regional and distant control should be investigated.

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