Literature DB >> 10661340

Importance of radiation therapy for breast cancer patients treated with high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell transplant.

T A Buchholz1, S L Tucker, R A Moore, M D McNeese, E A Strom, A Jhingrin, G N Hortobagyi, S E Singletary, R E Champlin.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine local-regional failure rates in breast cancer patients treated with surgery and high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell transplant and to relate local-regional failure to the use and timing of radiation treatment. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We retrospectively reviewed the records of 165 breast cancer patients treated on institutional protocols with surgery and high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell transplant. All patients had either Stage III disease, 10 or more positive axillary lymph nodes, or 4 or more positive axillary lymph nodes following neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Twelve patients had inflammatory breast cancer. Thirteen patients treated with breast preservation and 5 patients who died from toxicity within 30 days of transplant were excluded from the analyses of local-regional recurrences. In the remaining 147 patients, 108 were treated with adjuvant radiation and 39 were not. The disease stage distribution for these two groups was comparable. The median follow-up for surviving patients was 35 months.
RESULTS: The 3- and 5-year actuarial disease-free survival (DFS) for the entire group was 60% and 51%, respectively. The 5-year rates of freedom from isolated local-regional recurrence were 95% in the patients treated with adjuvant radiation and 86% in the patients who did not receive radiation (p = 0.014, log rank comparison). The 5-year rates of any local-regional recurrence as a first event (isolated recurrences plus those with simultaneous local-regional and distant recurrences) were 92% versus 82%, respectively for patients whose treatment did and did not include radiation (p = 0.038). We could not demonstrate a correlation of the timing of radiation with the risk of local-regional recurrence.
CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that high-dose chemotherapy does not negate the importance of radiation in optimizing local-regional control in patients with high-risk breast cancer. Given the results of recent randomized trials studying postmastectomy radiation, which show that improving local-regional control improves overall survival (OS), we believe that all breast cancer patients with high-risk primary breast cancer who are treated with high-dose chemotherapy with stem cell transplant should receive radiation as a component of their treatment.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10661340     DOI: 10.1016/s0360-3016(99)00429-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys        ISSN: 0360-3016            Impact factor:   7.038


  2 in total

1.  Impact of high-dose chemotherapy on the ability to deliver subsequent local-regional radiotherapy for breast cancer: analysis of Cancer and Leukemia Group B Protocol 9082.

Authors:  Lawrence B Marks; Constance Cirrincione; Thomas J Fitzgerald; Frances Laurie; Arvin S Glicksman; James Vredenburgh; Leonard R Prosnitz; Elizabeth J Shpall; Michael Crump; Paul G Richardson; Michael W Schuster; Jinli Ma; Bercedis L Peterson; Larry Norton; Steven Seagren; I Craig Henderson; David D Hurd; William P Peters
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2009-09-09       Impact factor: 7.038

2.  Short- and long-term cause-specific survival of patients with inflammatory breast cancer.

Authors:  Patricia Tai; Edward Yu; Ross Shiels; Juan Pacella; Kurian Jones; Evgeny Sadikov; Shazia Mahmood
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2005-10-22       Impact factor: 4.430

  2 in total

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