• J Surg Oncol · Jan 1999

    Irradiation of the tumor bed alone after lumpectomy in selected patients with early-stage breast cancer treated with breast conserving therapy.

    • F Vicini, V R Kini, P Chen, E Horwitz, G Gustafson, P Benitez, G Edmundson, N Goldstein, K McCarthy, and A Martinez.
    • Department of Radiation Oncology, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan 48073, USA. fvicini@beaumont.edu
    • J Surg Oncol. 1999 Jan 1; 70 (1): 33-40.

    Backgrounds And ObjectivesWe present the interim findings of our in-house protocol treating the tumor bed alone after lumpectomy with low-dose-rate (LDR) interstitial brachytherapy in selected patients with early-stage breast cancer treated with breast conserving therapy (BCT).MethodsFrom 1 March 1993 through 1 January 1995, 50 women with early-stage breast cancer were entered into a protocol of tumor bed irradiation alone using an interstitial LDR implant. Patients were eligible if their tumor was an infiltrating ductal carcinoma < or =3 cm in diameter, surgical margins were clear by at least 2 mm, the tumor did not contain an extensive intraductal component, the axilla was surgically staged with < or =3 nodes involved with cancer, and a postoperative mammogram was performed. Implants were positioned using a template guide delivering 50 Gy over 96 hr to the lumpectomy bed plus a 1-2-cm margin. Local control, cosmetic outcome, and complications were assessed.ResultsPatients ranged in age from 40 to 84 years (median, 65). The median tumor size was 10 mm (range, 1-25). Seventeen of 50 patients (34%) had well-differentiated tumors, 22 (44%) had moderately differentiated tumors, and in 11 (22%) the tumor was poorly differentiated. Forty-five patients (90%) were node-negative while five (10%) had 1-3 positive nodes. A total of 23 (46%) patients were placed on tamoxifen and 3 (6%) received adjuvant systemic chemotherapy. No patient was lost to follow-up. The median follow-up for surviving patients is 47 months (range, 37-59). No patient has experienced a local, regional, or distant failure. Three patients have died at 19, 33, and 39 months after treatment. All were without clinical evidence of recurrent disease and all deaths were unrelated to treatment. Good-to-excellent cosmetic results have been observed in 49 of 50 patients (98%) (median cosmetic follow-up was 44 months with a range of 19-59). No patient has experienced significant sequelae related to their implant.ConclusionsInterim results with treatment of the tumor bed alone with an LDR interstitial implant appear promising. Long-term follow-up of these patients and additional studies will be necessary to establish the equivalence of this treatment approach compared to standard BCT.

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