Literature DB >> 29926900

Breast-conserving surgery followed by whole-breast irradiation offers survival benefits over mastectomy without irradiation.

J de Boniface1,2, J Frisell1,3, L Bergkvist4,5, Y Andersson4,5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The prognostic equivalence between mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery (BCS) followed by radiotherapy was shown in pivotal trials conducted decades ago. Since then, detection and treatment of breast cancer have improved substantially and recent retrospective analyses point towards a survival benefit for less extensive breast surgery. Evidence for the association of such survival data with locoregional recurrence rates is largely lacking.
METHODS: The Swedish Multicentre Cohort Study prospectively included clinically node-negative patients with breast cancer who had planned sentinel node biopsy between 2000 and 2004. Axillary lymph node dissection was undertaken only in patients with sentinel node metastases. For the present investigation, adjusted survival analyses were used to compare patients who underwent BCS and postoperative radiotherapy with those who received mastectomy without radiotherapy.
RESULTS: Of 3518 patients in the Swedish Multicentre Cohort Study, 2767 were included in the present analysis; 2338 had BCS with postoperative radiotherapy and 429 had mastectomy without radiotherapy. Median follow-up was 156 months. BCS followed by whole-breast irradiation was superior to mastectomy without irradiation in terms of both overall survival (79·5 versus 64·3 per cent respectively at 13 years; P < 0·001) and breast cancer-specific survival (90·5 versus 84·0 per cent at 13 years; P < 0·001). The local recurrence rate did not differ between the two groups. The axillary recurrence-free survival rate at 13 years was significantly lower after mastectomy without irradiation (98·3 versus 96·2 per cent; P < 0·001).
CONCLUSION: The present data support the superiority of BCS with postoperative radiotherapy over mastectomy without radiotherapy. The axillary recurrence rate differed significantly, and could be one contributing factor in a complex explanatory model.
© 2018 The Authors. BJS published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.

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Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29926900      PMCID: PMC6220856          DOI: 10.1002/bjs.10889

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Surg        ISSN: 0007-1323            Impact factor:   6.939


Introduction

The pivotal trials showing equivalent oncological outcomes after breast‐conserving surgery (BCS) with adjuvant whole‐breast radiotherapy (RT) and after mastectomy were conducted decades ago1, 2. Data from these trials have been crucial to change in the understanding of local treatment of breast cancer, but since then the scenario has changed substantially. Survival rates are increasing, probably owing to a combination of decreasing tumour size and fewer patients presenting with node‐positive disease at diagnosis. At the same time, the use of adjuvant treatment has increased markedly, and is currently based more on tumour biology than disease stage. In recent years, several large retrospective analyses of contemporary data3, 4, 5 have suggested the stage‐adjusted superiority of BCS over mastectomy in early breast cancer in terms of breast cancer‐specific survival and overall survival. Other publications have focused on young women6, 7, 8 or triple‐negative breast cancer9, with the results indicating that BCS is at least as good as mastectomy in terms of survival outcomes. This interesting finding has led some authors to question whether mastectomy without RT should be offered at all as a treatment alternative for early breast cancer10, or whether it is time to abandon the ‘mastectomy myth’11. A convincing explanation for these observations is still lacking, and there might be explanatory factors that were not adjusted for in the mostly retrospective, non‐randomized published studies. Locoregional recurrence rates have reportedly been higher after BCS than mastectomy2, 12, and especially so in triple‐negative and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2)‐positive breast cancer13, although contradictory results were reported by Zumsteg and colleagues9. Unfortunately, locoregional recurrence rates were rarely available in the abovementioned retrospective studies, as few registries provided reliable data on these events. Therefore, it has not been clearly shown whether locoregional recurrence is truly a more common event after BCS than mastectomy. Likewise, it could not be elucidated whether locoregional recurrences may explain the observed differences in survival after BCS and mastectomy. Despite their impressive population sizes, retrospective observational analyses are not only prone to selection effects, but frequently also lack data on recurrence and oncological treatments administered. Therefore, the present analysis was performed using data from the Swedish Multicentre Cohort Study, in which patients were enrolled prospectively and followed up regularly, with the aim of comparing survival and locoregional recurrence rates following BCS with RT and mastectomy without RT.

Methods

Between September 2000 and January 2004, the prospective Swedish Multicentre Cohort Study enrolled patients with breast cancer from 26 Swedish hospitals. Level I and II completion axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) was undertaken only in patients with sentinel node‐positive disease. Completion ALND was carried out if no sentinel lymph node could be identified. Inclusion criteria were: primary unifocal, clinically node‐negative invasive breast cancer smaller than 30 mm in diameter at preoperative staging. Preoperative imaging comprised mammography and/or ultrasonography; MRI was not part of the study protocol. Patients whose tumours exceeded 30 mm in size on final histopathological examination no longer fulfilled the inclusion criteria and were excluded. Exclusion criteria were: neoadjuvant chemotherapy and/or RT, pregnancy, previous allergic reaction to blue dye or isotope, previous ipsilateral breast surgery and suspected tumour multifocality. The injection techniques used for sentinel node biopsy have been described in detail elsewhere14, 15. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients before enrolment. The study was approved by the central ethics committee in Stockholm and the individual regional ethics committees before study initiation (no. 00‐053; updated in 2015, no. 2015/979‐32). Follow‐up was scheduled as annual mammography and clinical examination; however, telephone interviews by trained nurses were performed instead by a few centres. The recently updated database includes follow‐up reports from each participating hospital submitted in autumn 2016 (last visit, incidence of breast cancer relapse, tumour location, contralateral breast cancer and death). For the present analysis, patients were selected from the above cohort who met following additional criteria: they had to have follow‐up within Sweden and have a confirmed invasive breast cancer on histopathology. Surgical axillary staging had to have been performed. Patients with previous or synchronous breast cancer were excluded. To restrict the selection of patients to those with early breast cancer, patients with a pathological tumour size larger than 30 mm or more than nine positive lymph nodes on ALND were also excluded, as were a few patients with distant metastases diagnosed within 2 months of study inclusion. To compare patients treated by BCS followed by whole‐breast RT with patients undergoing mastectomy without RT, all other local treatment strategies were excluded (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Flow chart showing the selection of patients for the present analysis. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy

Flow chart showing the selection of patients for the present analysis. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy Breast cancer death was defined as death from breast cancer, and patients were censored either at the date of death or last date of follow‐up if no breast cancer death had occurred. Data on breast cancer as a cause of death were received both from participating centres and from the national cause of death database. Isolated axillary recurrence was defined as an axillary nodal recurrence, without a concurrent ipsilateral in‐breast recurrence diagnosed within 3 months before or after the axillary recurrence. Patients without any breast cancer event were censored at the date of last follow‐up.

Statistical analysis

The initial power calculation has been described elsewhere15; in the main trial, the primary endpoint was axillary recurrence. In the present study, breast cancer‐specific survival was calculated from the date of operation to the date of breast cancer death or the date of last clinical follow‐up, if death did not occur. Overall survival was calculated from the date of surgery to the date of death from any cause, or the date of last follow‐up noted in the electronic patient charts, which are automatically linked to the population register containing information on death and date of death. Descriptive data are presented as numbers with percentages and median (range). The Mann–Whitney U test was used for comparison of continuous variables in the two local treatment groups. The χ2 test or Fisher's exact test, as appropriate, was used for analysis of the distribution of categorical variables between the groups. Survival analysis was first performed by the Kaplan–Meier method, with comparison of survival curves by means of the log rank test. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was then added to adjust the results for tumour and patient characteristics. All variables listed in Table  1 were included in the multivariable regression analysis, regardless of their significance on univariable regression. Surrogate tumour subtypes were not included to avoid confounding with the underlying factors already included in the analysis. Results are presented as hazard ratios (HRs) with 95 per cent confidence intervals.
Table 1

Patient and tumour characteristics according to local treatment combination

BCS with RT (n = 2338)Mastectomy without RT (n = 429) P
Patient age (years)* 58 (23–88)63 (28–94)< 0·001
< 4186 (3·7)22 (5·1)< 0·001
41–50413 (17·7)58 (13·5)
51–651276 (54·6)165 (38·5)
> 65563 (24·1)184 (42·9)
Invasive tumour size (mm)* 14 (1–30)16 (2–30)< 0·001
1–582 (3·5)15 (3·5)< 0·001
6–10497 (21·3)58 (13·5)
11–201413 (60·4)245 (57·1)
21–30346 (14·8)111 (25·9)
Histological subtype< 0·001
Ductal1627 (69·6)256 (59·7)
Lobular233 (10·0)76 (17·7)
Other145 (6·2)31 (7·2)
Ductal and lobular17 (0·7)5 (1·2)
Missing316 (13·5)61 (14·2)
Multifocal tumour< 0·001§
Yes88 (3·8)64 (14·9)
No2250 (96·2)365 (85·1)
Nottingham Histological Grade0·030
1661 (28·3)95 (22·1)
21136 (48·6)225 (52·4)
3469 (20·1)96 (22·4)
Missing72 (3·1)13 (3·0)
Oestrogen receptor status0·433§
Positive1983 (84·8)369 (86·0)
Negative309 (13·2)50 (11·7)
Missing46 (2·0)10 (2·3)
Progesterone receptor status0·905§
Positive1639 (70·1)298 (69·5)
Negative630 (26·9)116 (27·0)
Missing69 (3·0)15 (3·5)
Pathological node category0·024
pN01779 (76·1)348 (81·1)
pN1489 (20·9)76 (17·7)
pN270 (3·0)5 (1·2)
Adjuvant treatment
Endocrine therapy0·207§
Yes1576 (67·4)303 (70·6)
No722 (30·9)119 (27·7)
Missing40 (1·7)7 (1·6)
Chemotherapy< 0·001§
Yes489 (20·9)52 (12·1)
No1779 (76·1)372 (86·7)
Missing70 (3·0)5 (1·2)

Values in parentheses are percentages unless indicated otherwise;

values are median (range). BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy.

χ2 test, except

Mann–Whitney U test and

Fisher's exact test.

Patient and tumour characteristics according to local treatment combination Values in parentheses are percentages unless indicated otherwise; values are median (range). BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. χ2 test, except Mann–Whitney U test and Fisher's exact test. All data analysis was performed using SPSS® version 22 (IBM, Armonk, New York, USA). Statistical significance was set at a level of 5 per cent for all analyses.

Results

Overall and breast cancer‐specific survival according to local treatment

Of 3518 patients enrolled in the Swedish Multicentre Cohort Study, 2767 remained in the analysis after applying the selection criteria (Fig. 1); 429 patients underwent mastectomy without RT and 2338 had BCS followed by whole‐breast RT. Median follow‐up was 156 (range 0–189) months; there was one postoperative death from cardiac failure. Overall, there were 653 deaths, translating into a 13‐year overall survival rate of 77·2 per cent for the entire cohort (79·5 per cent for BCS with RT and 64·3 per cent for mastectomy without RT; P < 0·001) (Fig. 2). A total of 277 patients died from breast cancer, with a 13‐year breast cancer‐specific survival rate of 89·6 per cent for the entire cohort (90·5 per cent for BCS with RT and 84·0 per cent for mastectomy without RT; P < 0·001) (Fig. 3).
Figure 2

Kaplan–Meier survival curves showing overall survival in the two local treatment groups. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. P < 0·001 (log rank test)

Figure 3

Kaplan–Meier survival curves showing breast cancer‐specific survival in the two local treatment groups. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. P < 0·001 (log rank test)

Kaplan–Meier survival curves showing overall survival in the two local treatment groups. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. P < 0·001 (log rank test) Kaplan–Meier survival curves showing breast cancer‐specific survival in the two local treatment groups. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. P < 0·001 (log rank test) Patient and tumour characteristics are presented in Table  1. Notably, patients in the mastectomy group differed from those in the BCS group in terms of a higher percentage of lobular and multifocal tumours of a higher histological grade and larger size in an older population. In the BCS group, more patients had positive lymph nodes and had received chemotherapy. To allow for these group differences, survival outcomes were adjusted for all factors listed in Table  1 in multivariable Cox regression analyses. These analyses showed that treatment with mastectomy without RT was an independent negative factor for overall survival (HR 1·70, 95 per cent c.i. 1·38 to 2·10), together with oestrogen receptor (ER) negativity, higher tumour grade, higher nodal category, tumour size above 20 mm and older age (Table  2). Findings were similar for breast cancer‐specific survival (Table  3); being treated by mastectomy without adjuvant RT was an independent negative factor (HR 1·69, 1·22 to 2·33), as were ER negativity, older age, higher tumour grade and higher nodal category.
Table 2

Univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses for overall survival

Univariable analysisMultivariable analysis
Hazard ratio P Hazard ratio P
Age (years)
< 410·20 (0·11, 0·37)< 0·0010·16 (0·80, 0·34)< 0·001
41–500·22 (0·17, 0·30)< 0·0010·21 (0·15, 0·30)< 0·001
51–650·40 (0·34, 0·47)< 0·0010·41 (0·34, 0·49)< 0·001
> 651·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Invasive tumour size (mm)
1–51·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
6–100·98 (0·58, 1·67)0·9511·19 (0·59, 2·40)0·625
11–201·47 (0·89, 2·42)0·1331·63 (0·83, 3·18)0·154
21–302·26 (1·35, 3·79)0·0022·09 (1·05, 4·15)0·036
Histological subtype
Ductal1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Lobular1·02 (0·80, 1·31)0·8500·79 (0·61, 1·03)0·088
Other0·85 (0·61, 1·18)0·3320·82 (0·57, 1·20)0·317
Ductal and lobular0·35 (0·09, 1·41)0·1410·38 (0·09, 1·53)0·172
Multifocal tumour
Yes1·04 (0·75, 1·45)0·8120·94 (0·65, 1·37)0·756
No1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Pathological node category
pN01·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
pN11·37 (1·15, 1·64)0·0011·58 (1·27, 1·96)< 0·001
pN22·00 (1·36, 2·92)< 0·0012·75 (1·77, 4·28)< 0·001
Nottingham Histological Grade
11·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
21·77 (1·44, 2·18)< 0·0011·80 (1·39, 2·31)< 0·001
32·09 (1·65, 2·64)< 0·0012·23 (1·64, 3·02)< 0·001
Oestrogen receptor status
Positive1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Negative1·35 (1·09, 1·66)0·0051·45 (1·02, 2·05)0·037
Progesterone receptor status
Positive1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Negative1·29 (1·09, 1·52)0·0030·98 (0·77, 1·23)0·838
Adjuvant chemotherapy
Yes1·17 (0·96, 1·44)0·1221·22 (0·92, 1·62)0·174
No1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Adjuvant endocrine therapy
Yes1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
No0·90 (0·75, 1·05)0·1761·00 (0·78, 1·29)0·999
Local treatment
BCS with RT1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Mastectomy without RT1·87 (1·56, 2·24)< 0·0011·70 (1·38, 2·10)< 0·001

Values in parentheses are 95 per cent confidence intervals. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy.

Table 3

Univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses breast cancer‐specific survival

Univariable analysisMultivariable analysis
Hazard ratio P Hazard ratio P
Age (years)
< 410·66 (0·34, 1·27)0·2160·43 (0·19, 0·96)0·041
41–500·68 (0·48, 0·98)0·0390·63 (0·41, 0·97)0·035
51–650·68 (0·52, 0·89)0·0050·72 (0·53, 0·99)0·044
> 651·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Invasive tumour size (mm)
1–51·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
6–100·80 (0·30, 2·11)0·6530·88 (0·26, 3·02)0·840
11–202·00 (0·82, 4·87)0·1271·80 (0·57, 5·70)0·319
21–303·90 (1·58, 9·63)0·0032·39 (0·74, 7·71)0·146
Histological subtype
Ductal1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Lobular0·99 (0·68, 1·44)0·9740·91 (0·60, 1·37)0·648
Other0·80 (0·47, 1·35)0·4000·96 (0·54, 1·70)0·885
Ductal and lobular0·41 (0·06, 2·93)0·3750·38 (0·05, 2·79)0·345
Multifocal tumour
Yes0·93 (0·54, 1·59)0·7830·84 (0·47, 1·50)0·566
No1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Pathological node category
pN01·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
pN12·20 (1·70, 2·83)< 0·0012·77 (1·63, 4·72)< 0·001
pN23·74 (2·33, 6·02)< 0·0012·64 (1·93, 3·60)< 0·001
Nottingham Histological Grade
11·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
22·82 (1·89, 4·21)< 0·0012·33 (1·48, 3·67)< 0·001
35·30 (3·51, 8·00)< 0·0013·88 (2·26, 6·37)< 0·001
Oestrogen receptor status
Positive1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Negative2·12 (1·60, 2·80)< 0·0011·76 (1·05, 2·97)0·033
Progesterone receptor status
Positive1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Negative1·80 (1·41, 2·30)< 0·0011·21 (0·85, 1·71)0·288
Adjuvant chemotherapy
Yes0·65 (0·50, 0·85)0·0011·13 (0·94, 2·02)0·101
No1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Adjuvant endocrine therapy
Yes1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
No0·93 (0·72, 1·21)0·5930·89 (0·58, 1·37)0·603
Local treatment
BCS with RT1·00 (reference)1·00 (reference)
Mastectomy without RT1·76 (1·33, 2·33)< 0·0011·69 (1·22, 2·33)0·001

Values in parentheses are 95 per cent confidence intervals. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy.

Univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses for overall survival Values in parentheses are 95 per cent confidence intervals. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy. Univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses breast cancer‐specific survival Values in parentheses are 95 per cent confidence intervals. BCS, breast‐conserving surgery; RT, radiotherapy.

Locoregional recurrence rates according to local treatment and impact on survival

As the isolated axillary recurrence rate was the primary endpoint of the prospective cohort study, this outcome was compared between the two treatment groups. Overall, 41 isolated axillary recurrences were found (1·5 per cent): 26 (1·1 per cent) after BCS with RT and 15 (3·5 per cent) after mastectomy without RT (P = 0·001). The resulting 13‐year isolated axillary recurrence‐free survival rates were 98·3 and 96·2 per cent respectively (P < 0·001). Median time to isolated axillary recurrence was 39 (range 4–157) months overall: 39·5 (10–157) months for BCS with RT and 39 (4–117) months for mastectomy without RT (P = 0·357). Of 41 isolated axillary recurrences, 31 occurred in patients with node‐negative disease. Overall, 139 recurrences within the ipsilateral breast or chest wall were recorded, with 13‐year local recurrence‐free survival rates of 90·5 and 95·1 per cent in the BCS with RT and mastectomy without RT groups respectively (P = 0·428). Both local recurrence and isolated axillary recurrence were strong independent predictors of breast cancer death, with HRs of 3·04 (95 per cent c.i. 2·05 to 4·50) and 4·28 (2·55 to 7·17) respectively when these events were added separately into the multivariable regression analysis performed previously. The same was true for overall survival as an endpoint in the case of isolated axillary recurrence, with a HR of 2·64 (1·66 to 4·19); local recurrence showed a near‐significant association with worse overall survival (HR 1·40, 1·00 to 1·96). Independent risk factors for developing an isolated axillary recurrence on multivariable Cox regression analysis were undergoing mastectomy without adjuvant RT (HR 2·98, 1·44 to 6·17) and high histological grade (HR 3·94, 1·28 to 12·16). Even adjusting for the number of excised axillary lymph nodes did not change the HR for mastectomy without RT compared with BCS with RT; 12 of 15 cases of isolated axillary recurrence after mastectomy without RT were classified as node‐negative and the patients underwent sentinel node biopsy only.

Discussion

This large prospective cohort study of early breast cancer with long follow‐up has confirmed the superiority of BCS with postoperative RT over mastectomy without RT in terms of breast cancer‐specific survival and overall survival. Although a number of explanatory factors, such as selection bias owing to co‐morbidity and socioeconomic factors, remain unknown, an increased axillary recurrence rate after mastectomy without RT may be one of several factors contributing to this finding. It is possible that tangential RT fields originating from whole‐breast RT after BCS exert some protective effect on axillary recurrence by controlling minimal residual disease, although this could not fully explain the survival advantage in patients treated with BCS with RT over those who underwent mastectomy without RT. False‐negative rates in sentinel node biopsy range between 0 and 40 per cent, with a median of 7 per cent16. Despite this, axillary recurrences after a negative sentinel node biopsy are rare, which may be attributed to improved systemic therapies, unintended RT to the lower axilla by tangential fields in whole‐breast irradiation, and immunological processes. In the present cohort, the 10‐year axillary recurrence rate among node‐negative individuals was only 1·6 per cent17. Interestingly, most reports and reviews on axillary recurrence rates after a negative sentinel node biopsy without completion axillary dissection did not elaborate on differences between BCS and mastectomy18, 19. One exception is the report from Milan by Galimberti and colleagues20 on a cohort of 5262 patients with a median follow‐up of 7 years. In this study, both external‐beam RT and BCS were shown to be significantly protective of axillary recurrence as a first event; however, both lost statistical significance on multivariable analysis. From the same institution, Gentilini and co‐workers21 recently published data on an interesting comparison of axillary recurrence rates in patients operated by BCS and irradiated by external‐beam whole‐breast RT or by intraoperative partial breast irradiation. The 10‐year cumulative incidence of axillary recurrence was significantly lower for those receiving whole‐breast RT (1·3 versus 4·0 per cent), clearly demonstrating an effect of unintentional RT to the lower axilla resulting from tangential fields in whole‐breast irradiation21. The proportion of axillary levels I–II receiving 95 per cent of the isodose by standard tangential fields varies between 23 and 87 per cent (average 55 per cent)22; likewise, it was shown that between 5 and 80 (mean 48·7) per cent of the 50‐Gy RT dose intended for the breast reached the lower axilla23. It is therefore agreed that whole‐breast RT does not achieve adequate axillary coverage if high tangents are not used, as in the present study. Despite this, there is mounting clinical evidence that even standard tangential fields provide a degree of regional control. A 2011 review24 reported that external‐beam whole‐breast irradiation decreased the rate of axillary recurrence after a negative sentinel node biopsy. Likewise, the watershed randomized trials on sentinel node‐positive patients not undergoing completion axillary dissection demonstrated much lower axillary recurrence rates than expected, only enrolling patients treated by BCS with mandatory whole‐breast irradiation25, 26. Although it could be argued that systemic treatment effects must play a major part in these results in node‐positive populations, this is likely to have less impact in the present analysis as only a minority of patients received adjuvant chemotherapy. An important drawback of the present analysis is that socioeconomic differences and co‐morbidities were not registered prospectively at the time of study, precluding the analysis of these potentially significant confounders. Furthermore, detailed information on irradiation doses and target volumes was not recorded, but high tangents were not in use in whole‐breast or chest‐wall irradiation. A major composite impact of these factors is certainly to be expected because the increased axillary recurrence rate, although significant, cannot explain the observed differences in survival rates. In addition, there were several significant baseline differences between the two groups, which in large part can be explained by the underlying selection mechanisms for the surgical methods studied. Multifocality, for example, is a known contributor to the surgical choice of mastectomy, but may at the same time represent both a risk factor for a false‐negative sentinel node biopsy27, 28 and for worse prognosis29. This factor, however, was not identified as an independent predictor in the adjusted analyses, which is in line with publications reporting that the type of surgery might not influence the association between multifocality and worse tumour characteristics and outcome30, 31. The observed group differences do pose a substantial problem, but as randomized prospective trials in this area are unlikely to be undertaken in the near future, this large prospective cohort comes as close to a controlled setting as possible. This large prospective cohort study has provided further support for the survival benefits resulting from BCS followed by whole‐breast irradiation in patients with early breast cancer. The data indicate a contributory role of partial RT coverage of the lower axillary levels in the avoidance of axillary recurrences; however, the improvements in breast cancer‐specific survival and overall survival call for further explanatory factors, and socioeconomic variables and co‐morbidity should receive closer scrutiny. The present data do not support the historical claim that there is a higher risk of local recurrence after BCS followed by RT.
  31 in total

1.  Early-stage young breast cancer patients: impact of local treatment on survival.

Authors:  Enja J Bantema-Joppe; Linda de Munck; Otto Visser; Pax H B Willemse; Johannes A Langendijk; Sabine Siesling; John H Maduro
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2011-09-09       Impact factor: 7.038

Review 2.  Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy in breast cancer.

Authors:  O E Nieweg; L Jansen; R A Valdés Olmos; E J Rutgers; J L Peterse; K A Hoefnagel; B B Kroon
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med       Date:  1999-04

3.  Multifocal and multicentric breast cancer is associated with increased local recurrence regardless of surgery type.

Authors:  Talha Shaikh; Tiffany Y Tam; Tianyu Li; Shelly B Hayes; Lori Goldstein; Richard Bleicher; Marcia Boraas; Elin Sigurdson; Paula D Ryan; Penny Anderson
Journal:  Breast J       Date:  2015-01-17       Impact factor: 2.431

4.  Irradiation with standard tangential breast fields in patients treated with conservative surgery and sentinel node biopsy: using a three-dimensional tool to evaluate the first level coverage of the axillary nodes.

Authors:  R Orecchia; A Huscher; M C Leonardi; R Gennari; V Galimberti; C Garibaldi; E Rondi; L C Bianchi; S Zurrida; S Franzetti
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.039

5.  Equivalent Survival With Mastectomy or Breast-conserving Surgery Plus Radiation in Young Women Aged < 40 Years With Early-Stage Breast Cancer: A National Registry-based Stage-by-Stage Comparison.

Authors:  Jason C Ye; Weisi Yan; Paul J Christos; Dattatreyudu Nori; Akkamma Ravi
Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer       Date:  2015-04-02       Impact factor: 3.225

6.  Axillary dissection versus no axillary dissection in patients with sentinel-node micrometastases (IBCSG 23-01): a phase 3 randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  Viviana Galimberti; Bernard F Cole; Stefano Zurrida; Giuseppe Viale; Alberto Luini; Paolo Veronesi; Paola Baratella; Camelia Chifu; Manuela Sargenti; Mattia Intra; Oreste Gentilini; Mauro G Mastropasqua; Giovanni Mazzarol; Samuele Massarut; Jean-Rémi Garbay; Janez Zgajnar; Hanne Galatius; Angelo Recalcati; David Littlejohn; Monika Bamert; Marco Colleoni; Karen N Price; Meredith M Regan; Aron Goldhirsch; Alan S Coates; Richard D Gelber; Umberto Veronesi
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2013-03-11       Impact factor: 41.316

7.  10 year survival after breast-conserving surgery plus radiotherapy compared with mastectomy in early breast cancer in the Netherlands: a population-based study.

Authors:  Marissa C van Maaren; Linda de Munck; Geertruida H de Bock; Jan J Jobsen; Thijs van Dalen; Sabine C Linn; Philip Poortmans; Luc J A Strobbe; Sabine Siesling
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2016-06-22       Impact factor: 41.316

8.  Effect of breast conservation therapy vs mastectomy on disease-specific survival for early-stage breast cancer.

Authors:  Shailesh Agarwal; Lisa Pappas; Leigh Neumayer; Kristine Kokeny; Jayant Agarwal
Journal:  JAMA Surg       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 14.766

9.  Eight-year results of a randomized clinical trial comparing total mastectomy and lumpectomy with or without irradiation in the treatment of breast cancer.

Authors:  B Fisher; C Redmond; R Poisson; R Margolese; N Wolmark; L Wickerham; E Fisher; M Deutsch; R Caplan; Y Pilch
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1989-03-30       Impact factor: 91.245

Review 10.  Breast cancer multifocality and multicentricity and locoregional recurrence.

Authors:  Siobhan P Lynch; Xiudong Lei; Limin Hsu; Funda Meric-Bernstam; Thomas A Buchholz; Hong Zhang; Gabriel N Hortobágyi; Ana M Gonzalez-Angulo; Vicente Valero
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2013-10-17
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  15 in total

Review 1.  Does Breast-Conserving Surgery with Radiotherapy have a Better Survival than Mastectomy? A Meta-Analysis of More than 1,500,000 Patients.

Authors:  Gabriel De la Cruz Ku; Manish Karamchandani; Diego Chambergo-Michilot; Alexis R Narvaez-Rojas; Michael Jonczyk; Fortunato S Príncipe-Meneses; David Posawatz; Salvatore Nardello; Abhishek Chatterjee
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 4.339

2.  Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Early Breast Cancer Using Methylene Blue Dye Alone: a Safe, Simple, and Cost-Effective Procedure in Resource-Constrained Settings.

Authors:  Sreekar Devarakonda; Shawn Sam Thomas; Supriya Sen; Varghese Thomas; Reka Karuppusami; Anish Jacob Cherian; Pooja Ramakant; Deepak Thomas Abraham; Paul Mazhuvanchary Jacob
Journal:  Indian J Surg Oncol       Date:  2021-01-16

3.  Modeling and Synthesis of Breast Cancer Optical Property Signatures With Generative Models.

Authors:  Arturo Pardo; Samuel S Streeter; Benjamin W Maloney; Jose A Gutierrez-Gutierrez; David M McClatchy; Wendy A Wells; Keith D Paulsen; Jose M Lopez-Higuera; Brian W Pogue; Olga M Conde
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2021-06-01       Impact factor: 11.037

4.  Effect of 21-gene recurrence score in decision-making for surgery in early stage breast cancer.

Authors:  San-Gang Wu; Wen-Wen Zhang; Jun Wang; Yong Dong; Yong-Xiong Chen; Zhen-Yu He
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2019-03-19       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  Influence of socioeconomic status on immediate breast reconstruction rate, patient information and involvement in surgical decision-making.

Authors:  A Frisell; J Lagergren; M Halle; J de Boniface
Journal:  BJS Open       Date:  2020-01-31

6.  Comparison of the ductal carcinoma in situ between White Americans and Chinese Americans.

Authors:  Xin-Wen Kuang; Zhi-Hong Sun; Jun-Long Song; Zhanyong Zhu; Chuang Chen
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-01-22       Impact factor: 1.889

7.  Recurrence and survival after standard versus oncoplastic breast-conserving surgery for breast cancer.

Authors:  C André; C Holsti; A Svenner; H Sackey; I Oikonomou; M Appelgren; A L V Johansson; J de Boniface
Journal:  BJS Open       Date:  2021-01-08

8.  Refusal of cancer-directed surgery in male breast cancer.

Authors:  Shipei Wang; Sichao Chen; Yihui Huang; Di Hu; Wen Zeng; Ling Zhou; Wei Zhou; Danyang Chen; Haifeng Feng; Wei Wei; Chao Zhang; Zeming Liu; Min Wang; Liang Guo
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2021-04-02       Impact factor: 1.817

9.  Mastectomy or Breast-Conserving Therapy for Early Breast Cancer in Real-Life Clinical Practice: Outcome Comparison of 7565 Cases.

Authors:  Stefanie Corradini; Daniel Reitz; Montserrat Pazos; Stephan Schönecker; Michael Braun; Nadia Harbeck; Christiane Matuschek; Edwin Bölke; Ute Ganswindt; Filippo Alongi; Maximilian Niyazi; Claus Belka
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2019-01-31       Impact factor: 6.639

Review 10.  Clinical characteristics of breast ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion: a narrative review.

Authors:  Jie Zheng; Jingjing Yu; Tao Zhou
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2020-11       Impact factor: 1.671

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