| Literature DB >> 1524919 |
E Bélembaogo1, V Feillel, P Chollet, H Curé, P Verrelle, F Kwiatkowski, J L Achard, G Le Bouëdec, J Chassagne, Y J Bignon.
Abstract
126 patients with non-inflammatory operable breast cancer, who otherwise would have undergone modified radical mastectomy (MRM), were treated by induction chemotherapy. Before treatment, every patient had a local and general assessment, and pathological or cytological evidence of malignancy. Patients received, every 3 weeks, the same treatment with doxorubicin, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, 5-fluorouracil (AVCF); methotrexate was added in 80 cases (AVCFM). Tumour shrinkage greater than 50% was documented in 105 (83%) of the 126 women. A higher objective response rate was obtained in aneuploid or high S phase tumours, especially in the patients treated with methotrexate. After chemotherapy, 41 patients were then treated by radiotherapy alone after complete or sub-complete response; 64 had a residual tumour that could be treated by conservative surgery and radiotherapy. Only 19 had MRM and radiotherapy. Histopathological complete remission was documented in 1 case; isolated residual tumour cells were found in 5 patients. Thus primary chemotherapy enhanced the possibility of breast conservation in up to 83% of the cases in a series in which most would have been otherwise subjected to a MRM because of tumour size.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1524919 DOI: 10.1016/0959-8049(92)90145-r
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer ISSN: 0959-8049 Impact factor: 9.162