Radiation doesn't help pts 50-75 with early stage breast cancer
Breast Conservation surgery with and without radiotherapy in patients aged 55-75 years with early stage breast cancer
Ann Surg Oncol. 2013 Oct 2. [Epub ahead of print]
Source
Breast Unit, Istituto Clinico Humanitas, Rozzano, Milan, Italy, corrado.tinterri@humanitas.it.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:
Breast-conserving therapy (BCT), including postoperative whole breast irradiation (WBI), is generally accepted as the treatment of choice for most patients with early-stage breast cancer. The question whether WBI is mandatory in all patients remains one of the most controversial issues in BCT. To answer this question, a randomized, prospective, multicentre study was launched in January 2001. Primary endpoints of the study were to assess the cumulative incidence of in-breast-recurrences (IBR) and overall survival (OAS) after conservative surgery (BCS) with or without WBI.
METHODS:
From January 2001 until December 2005, 749 patients with unifocal infiltrating breast cancer up to 25 mm, 0-3 positive axillary lymph nodes, no extensive intraductal component or lymphvascular invasion from 11 centres in Italy, were randomly assigned to BCS+WBI (arm 1:373 patients) or BCS alone (arm 2:376 patients). Treatment arms were well balanced in terms of baseline characteristics. Systemic adjuvant therapy was administered according to the institutional policies. Kaplan-Meier method was used for survival analysis and log-rank test to evaluate the difference between the two arms. RESULTS (LAST ANALYSIS 31.12.2012): After median follow-up of 108 months, 12 (3.4 %) IBR were observed in arm 1 and 16 (4.4 %) in arm 2. OAS was 81.4 % in arm 1 and 83.7 % in arm 2. There was no statistically significant difference regarding IBR and death in the two treatment groups.
CONCLUSIONS:
These data are promising and suggest that WBI after BCS can be omitted in selected patients with early stage breast cancer without exposing them to an increased risk of local recurrence and death. Longer follow-up is needed to further consolidate these results.
Comments
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I tried to edit title above without success--please see text. Study refers to 55-75 year-olds. -
What the study seems to be saying is not that radiation doesn't help these patients, but that the majority of patients are just fine, even without radiation. This isn't really news - we know that many patients are 'cured' with surgery alone. The problem however is we don't know which patients need these extra treatments (such as rads) and which don't and that's why more patients get these treatments than really need them.
It is interesting to note that the recurrence rate was 3.4% in the radiation group and 4.4% in the non-radiation group. This difference is not statistically signficant at the 95% level and therefore the conclusion is that there is no difference in results between the rads and non-rads groups. But if the sample size had been larger and if this same difference held, the results would have been considered significant. -
Beesie, my doc has done research on BC therapy for older women. He is a proponent of using aggressive treatment for older women as well. He feels that as people live longer and healthier lives, it is a mistake to write off older patients. -
I was 53 when dx. I had rads to my whole breast (rt side) and clavicle nodes. BMX pathology this past July showed no evidence of involvement, no hyperplasia or abnormality on the involved breast, but showed mild hyperplasia in the UNRADIATED (left) breast. Perhaps it was just a fluke, but it appears for me that rads might have helped me. -
Claire, you don't say?Could that be why docs recommend rads?
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Study patients received radiation during surgery rather than after.
(HealthDay)—Some women with early breast cancer might benefit from a "one-and-done" treatment, in which they receive a single dose of targeted radiation therapy during the surgery that removes their tumor.
A pair of new studies found that this procedure works about as well as current protocols that require six weeks of daily radiation therapy following surgery.
The new procedure uses miniature devices that deliver radiation directly to the site of the tumor, while the site remains exposed by surgery following lumpectomy.
"It's right in front of the surgeon's and the radiation oncologist's eyes, so we can put the beam precisely where it is needed," said study co-author Dr. Michael Baum, emeritus professor of surgery and a principal research associate at the University College London Medical School. "We can form the cavity to the shape of the beam. It's elegant and dead simple..."
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-11-one-stop-treatment-breast-cancer-alternative.html -
Voracious, I had the pleasure of having dinner with the guy who had the idea for this treatment years ago, when his son was going through brain cancer treatment (which was unsuccessful).
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/8936#.UoJQgJRgbvY -
Interesting ... -
Interesting that the patients who chose not to have radiation had slightly more recurrences, yet their overall survival was higher than the group who had radiation. Seems contradictory, doesn't it? -
If the group being studied was younger, that might be interesting. But in a group of women aged 55 - 70, over-all survival will be influenced by many things other than breast cancer and breast cancer treatment. Heart disease is the greatest cause of death among older women. -
Well, you'd think there would be no difference, since they were all in the same age group, wouldn't you? -
If the sample sizes were larger, then yes, eventually you would expect both groups to have the same mortality rate, and therefore, the same overall survival rate. But with a smaller sample size, random differences appear exaggerated. If just a few more women in one of the groups had other health problems or accidents that led to their death, that would appear to make the OAS numbers look very different. This is why with a smaller sample size, you require a much larger difference between the groups for the results to be statistically significant, because a shift of just 3 or 4 people can completely change the results. With larger samples, a much smaller difference would be statistically significant. This is because when a group is larger, a shift of just a few people from one side to the other doesn't have much affect on the percentages.
The other thing to consider is that when you are looking at recurrence rates, there is only one event that is being measured.... did someone have a recurrence or did they not? So it's easy to get a clean comparison. But when you are looking at survival, or more to the point, mortality, which is the inverse of survival, there are dozens of things that can happen that will influence this number, especially when you are tracking for 9 years a group of women who start out between the ages of 55 to 70. Mortality could be caused by breast cancer, or by the effects of a breast cancer treatment, but within that age group, more of the mortality would be from heart disease, lung cancer, other illnesses, accidents, etc.. -
Thanks for the explanation, Beesie. -
New study on heart risk and rads. Not surprisingly, heart risk is strongly correlated to your risk without rads, and it goes up if you are getting rads on the left in a prone position. -
I'm wondering just what aspect of cardiac physiology is affected by the rads. I did get rads necrosis of the left breast from the rads right smack dab in front of the heart area. That portion of the left breast tissue is as hard as a rock. The study was for patients 55 and older. I had my left side rads prone at age 52 so was below the age range by just a couple of years, but 11 years later I just had my PCP do an echo, which came out with EF of 70, and while I never had trastuzumab I did have 6 doses of Adriamycin.
A.A.
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Alaska, what does EF of 70 signify? I have had echos (because I had epirubicin, which is similar to adriamycin), but so far they have been completely normal, rads, chemo and all. -
Momine, if AA is referring to Ejection Fraction (measures the percentage of your blood that is being pumped out of your heart each time it contracts) 55+ is "normal" and good (I had the same test done before chemo/rads, and scored 70, too). I had left-breast, center-chest rads (just to the left of my sternum) in a prone position (of course!) that required me to use a breathing machine to keep my heart/lungs out of the radiation field as much as possible. I also had 4xdd Adriamycin. 18 months post-final rads, I have now developed a heart "flutter" and struggle with breathing when I run/walk up stairs. Off to the cardiologist next week for tests, first one of which will likely include the EF again. I'll be interested to see if that's decreased at all, and if so how much. -
Nancy, thanks for explaining. I see it on my reports. It gives the normal range as 53-77. Before treatment my score was 68, after it was 80, whatever that means. -
So your heart got better after chemo and rads?! That's pretty awesome! -
Nancy, I made a point of walking all through chemo, then stepped the exercise up a notch once I felt better. I had that last echo around the same time as my hyster. Prior to the hyster surgery a cardiologist checked me over. Because of all the treatment, he was very careful and thorough. He asked if I was able to walk a little. I told him I usually managed about an hour a day, and the poor man was almost ready to cry, then expressed the fervent wish that all his patients would do the same.
But maybe it is bad that the number is outside the normal range? -
yes indeed! the lesion doesn't hurt or bother me when I'm carrying heavy, books, food papers, between here & the studio. my exercise. walking without heavy would be better. if I had the time -
Well, abigail, since you don't have cancer that would probably not be too difficult. -
takes time to do the homeopathic protocal, I figure I've now lain naked on the bathroom floor with a castor oil pack over a day all told 45 minutes at a time. also making the olive leaf decoction regularly takes time. & the green tes. & juiciddng, that takes 20 minutes a day or so including clean up & I gotta do that part now, yorkie -
Nancy, I checked and too high may also indicate a problem. However, my docs are not worried, so I imagine there would have to be other indications for it to be a problem. -
though if as undiagnosed I don't know what I have, no one else does either. & as someone recently posted an explication of "stages". if it grows through the skin the stage gets a higher number. that happened 2 years & 8 months ago. according to Mr. Google untreated breast cancer half will die in 2 .7 years. for me that's about now if I go on another 2.7 years that will take me to the age, early 80ies, a psychic once predicted ( I didn't ask) that my chart "no longer progressed" at that point. -
A lot of things can cause what you describe. Since it is not diagnosed one has to assume it isn't cancer. -
mention some please. why should you assume anything? it is or it isn't or it's something else. hope it isn't or is something else but not enough to get invasive tests. I may have to let a doctor see it to get good ins, that would be difficult enough & probably useless because no way would I let anyone take blood. It does seem from what I've read here that it is. what else would have red coming through the skin bit by bit & growing until it covers the cyst & beyond. -
I'm not a doctor, but there are lots of skin conditions and various types of benign growths. The fact that you've had it for so long and are still alive indicates it probably isn't cancer. Only way to diagnose cancer is through a biopsy, which you say you won't have. You can pretend all you want, but unless you get it diagnosed nobody here considers you a cancer sufferer. -
yorkiemom,
Here is where you're wrong. There have been and are a few here who do consider abigail's self dx to be true! "Heaven knows, anything goes..." -
Wow, I didn't realize that!
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