| Literature DB >> 28666457 |
Jan Poleszczuk1,2, Kimberly Luddy3, Lu Chen4, Jae K Lee4, Louis B Harrison5, Brian J Czerniecki6, Hatem Soliman7, Heiko Enderling8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compared with surgery alone, postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) improves relapse-free survival of patients with early-stage breast cancer. We evaluated the long-term overall and disease-free survival rates of neoadjuvant (presurgical) versus adjuvant RT in early-stage breast cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Disease-free survival; Early-stage breast cancer; Immune response; Overall survival; Postoperative radiotherapy; Preoperative radiotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28666457 PMCID: PMC5493088 DOI: 10.1186/s13058-017-0870-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Fig. 1Study enrollment. Of 1,300,604 female breast cancer records present in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database, 2554 patients who had radiotherapy (RT) before surgery (neoadjuvant RT) and 247,641 patients who had RT after surgery (adjuvant RT) were included in the analysis
Baseline characteristics of the stratified neoadjuvant and adjuvant radiotherapy cohorts
| Number of patients (%) |
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neoadjuvant RT ( | Adjuvant RT ( | ||||
| Age, years | 58.6 ± 12.9 | 59.5 ± 12.2 | <0.0001a | ||
| Year of diagnosis | 1995.7 ± 7.2 | 2003.1 ± 6.5 | <0.0001a | ||
| Race | |||||
| White | 2348 | (91.9%) | 206,775 | (83.5%) | <0.0001b |
| Black | 127 | (5%) | 21,169 | (8.5%) | <0.0001b |
| Other | 79 | (3.1%) | 19,697 | (8%) | <0.0001b |
| ER status | |||||
| Positive | 1368 | (53.6%) | 168,797 | (68.2%) | <0.0001b |
| Negative | 353 | (13.8%) | 34,494 | (13.9%) | 0.88b |
| Unknown | 833 | (32.6%) | 44,350 | (17.9%) | <0.0001b |
| PR status | |||||
| Positive | 1209 | (47.3%) | 144,228 | (58.2%) | <0.0001b |
| Negative | 492 | (19.3%) | 54,473 | (22%) | 0.0009b |
| Unknown | 853 | (33.4%) | 48,940 | (19.8%) | <0.0001b |
| Stage | |||||
| Carcinoma in situ | 344 | (13.5%) | 52,691 | (21.3%) | <0.0001b |
| T1 | 1390 | (54.4%) | 146,954 | (59.3%) | <0.0001b |
| T2 | 294 | (11.5%) | 30,683 | (12.4%) | 0.1798b |
| T3 | 49 | (1.9%) | 3034 | (1.2%) | 0.0016b |
| Unknown | 477 | (18.7%) | 14,279 | (5.8%) | <0.0001b |
| Histology | |||||
| Ductal | 2215 | (86.7%) | 213,143 | (86.1%) | 0.3397b |
| Lobular | 146 | (5.7%) | 14,270 | (5.8%) | 0.9212b |
| Other | 193 | (7.6%) | 20,228 | (8.2%) | 0.2614b |
| Type of surgery | |||||
| Partial mastectomy | 2192 | (85.8%) | 233,946 | (94.5%) | <0.0001b |
| Mastectomy | 269 | (10.5%) | 10,632 | (4.3%) | <0.0001b |
| Other | 93 | (3.6%) | 3063 | (1.2%) | <0.0001b |
ER Estrogen receptor, PR progesterone receptor
Age and year of diagnosis are reported as mean ± SD
a Wilcoxon rank-sum test with normal approximation
b Pearson’s chi-square test
Fig. 2HRs of developing second primary tumors calculated from a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model. a Patients who underwent breast-conserving surgery. b Patients who underwent mastectomy. Shown are HRs, 95% CIs, and P values. n Total number of patients in each cohort, I Number of patients who received neodjuvant radiotherapy (RT) in each cohort, ER Estrogen receptor
Fig. 3Survival curves for estrogen receptor-positive patients after partial mastectomy. Shown are (a) cancer-free and (b) overall survival curves with 95% CIs. RT radiotherapy
Fig. 4HRs of death calculated from a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model for patients diagnosed with estrogen-positive tumors who underwent breast-conserving surgery. Shown are HRs, 95% CIs, and P values. PR Progesterone receptor