| Literature DB >> 28928852 |
Henry M Kuerer1, Benjamin D Smith2, Mariana Chavez-MacGregor3,4, Constance Albarracin5, Carlos H Barcenas3, Lumarie Santiago6, Mary E Edgerton5, Gaiane M Rauch6, Sharon H Giordano3,4, Aysegul Sahin5, Savitri Krishnamurthy3, Wendy Woodward2, Debasish Tripathy3, Wei T Yang6, Kelly K Hunt1.
Abstract
Recent published guidelines suggest that adequate margins for DCIS should be ≥ 2 mm after breast conserving surgery followed by radiotherapy (RT). Many groups now use this guideline as an absolute indication for additional surgery. This article describes detailed multidisciplinary practices including extensive preoperative/intraoperative pathologic/histologic image-guided assessment of margins, offering some patients with small low/intermediate grade DCIS no RT, the use/magnitude of radiation boost tailoring to margin width, and endocrine therapy for ER-positive DCIS. Use of these protocols over the past 20-years has resulted in 10-year local recurrence rates below 5% for patients with negative margins < 2 mm who received RT. Patients with margins < 2 mm who do not receive RT experience significantly higher local failure rates. Thus, there is not an absolute need to achieve wider negative surgical margins when < 2 mm for patients treated with RT and this should be determined by the multidisciplinary team. Utilization of these multidisciplinary treatment protocols and techniques may not be exportable and extrapolated to all hospitals, breast programs and systems as they can be complex and resource intensive.Entities:
Keywords: DCIS; breast cancer; ductal carcinoma in situ; margins.; pathology; radiotherapy; surgery
Year: 2017 PMID: 28928852 PMCID: PMC5604195 DOI: 10.7150/jca.20871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Figure 1Local-regional recurrence outcome among 1,491 patients with DCIS treated with breast conservation all patients (A), with (B) and without (C) radiotherapy, stratified by margin status at MD Anderson Cancer Center 1996-2010. There was no statistical significant difference in LRR for patients with margins < 2 mm vs ≥ 2 mm who received RT, (10-year LRR 4.8% vs 3.3%, respectively; p=0.72; B). For patients who did not receive RT, those with margins < 2 mm were significantly more likely to develop a LRR than those with margins ≥ 2 mm (10-year LRR 30.9% vs. 5.4%, respectively; p=0.003; C)14, 15; with permission from Annals of Surgery. Promotional and commercial use of the material in print, digital or mobile device format is prohibited without permission from the publisher Wolters Kluwer. Please contact healthpermissions@wolterskluwer.com for further information.
Figure 2MD Anderson intraoperative pathologic and radiologic processing of segmental mastectomy specimens for DCIS a) Intraoperative specimen radiograph of the sectioned specimen is very important in the evaluation of margins. Careful evaluation of these slices helps to identify the targeted lesions as well as other abnormalities. Additional margins can be obtained when the abnormality is present close to or at the margins and each slice is designated as superior, inferior, medial, lateral, anterior, and posterior based on placement of the slices. The area on the 2nd row first slice on the left was interpreted as suspicious for residual DCIS and additional margin was recommended. b) Correlation of gross appearance and specimen radiograph is an important aspect of intraoperative evaluation of breast specimens. The gray white area present on gross inspection corresponds to architectural distortion/density on specimen radiograph (circled area). c) DCIS extending within 2.5 mm to an inked margin. The distance between green ink and ductal carcinoma in situ is reported as the margin width (lower right corner). d) DCIS is focally extending to margin (arrow). e) Higher magnification showing ducts with in situ carcinoma cells extending to inked margin (arrow).
Randomized controlled trials of endocrine therapy in patients with DCIS
| Clinical trial | Eligibility | Sample size | Comparison arms | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NSABP B-24[47] | Lumpectomy and radiation therapy | 1804 | Tamoxifen vs. placebo | Breast cancer events at 5 years: 8.2% (Tamoxifen) vs. 13.4% (placebo); p=0.0009 |
| NSABP B-24 with ER and PR assessment[48] | Lumpectomy and radiation therapy | 732 | Tamoxifen vs. placebo | In patients with ER+ DCIS, tamoxifen decreased breast cancer events at 10 years; HR: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.48-0.86; no benefit seen in ER-negative DCIS |
| UK/ANZ DCIS[50] | Completely locally excised DCIS (negative margins) | 1701 | 2 x 2 factorial of tamoxifen, or radiotherapy or both | Median follow-up of 12.7 years, tamoxifen reduced the incidence of all breast events; HR: 0.71, 95% CI: 0.58-0.88; benefit mainly among those who did not receive radiotherapy |
| NSABP B-35[53] | Postmenopausal, hormone-receptor-positive DCIS who underwent lumpectomy with clear margins | 3104 | Anastrozole vs. tamoxifen | Median follow-up of 9 years, 122 breast cancer-free events in the tamoxifen group vs. 90 in the anastrozole group; HR: 0.73, 95% CI: 0.56-0.96; benefit seen only in patients younger than 60 years of age |
| IBIS-II DCIS[55] | Postmenopausal, hormone-receptor-positive DCIS who underwent lumpectomy with clear margins | 2980 | Anastrozole vs. tamoxifen | Median follow-up of 7.2 years, 67 recurrences for anastrozole vs. 77 for tamoxifen; HR: 0.89, 95% CI: 0.64-1.23; no differences in outcomes between treatments |
Abbreviations: NSABP: National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project; UK/ANZ: United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand; IBIS: International Breast Cancer Intervention Study; HR: Hazard ratio; CI: confidence interval