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1.
Background: The relationship between an extensive intraductal component (EIC) and recurrence and survival in patients with stage I or II breast cancer treated with breast conservation therapy has not been clearly defined. Methods: 133 patients with stage I or II breast cancer who underwent breast conservation therapy between 1978 and 1990 at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center were retrospectively studied. All pathology slides were reviewed to determine tumor size, nuclear grade, extent of intraductal component, number of positive lymph nodes, and histologic margins. EIC was defined as ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) occupying 25% or more of the area encompassed by the infiltrating tumor and DCIS present in grossly normal adjacent breast tissue. Results: 110 patients are alive, and 23 have died, with a median follow-up of 7 years; 85 of 133 patients had an intraductal component, but only 18 had an EIC. Locoregional control and disease-free and overall survival were not adversely affected by the presence of an EIC. Five of 133 patients had a locoregional recurrence, but only one had an EIC. Conclusions: EIC, if negative margins can be achieved, does not adversely affect disease-free or overall survival or local control rates.  相似文献   

2.
Background: The presence of skin involvement has been accepted as a relative contraindication to breast preservation because it is believed to be associated with an increased local failure rate. This study was conducted to assess the outcome of a carefully selected group of patients who presented with breast cancer involving the skin and who had breast conservation therapy (BCT) following neoadjuvant chemotherapy.Methods: Between 1987 and 1999, 33 patients with stage IIIB or IIIC breast cancer completed treatment consisting of four cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, lumpectomy, radiation therapy, and consolidative chemotherapy. Clinicopathologic factors were analyzed and patients were followed for locoregional and distant recurrence.Results: Initial median tumor size was 7 cm. All patients had skin involvement, defined as erythema, skin edema, direct skin invasion, ulceration, or peau dorange. Following chemotherapy, median pathologic tumor size was 2 cm. Complete resolution of skin changes occurred in 29 patients (88%). At median follow-up time of 91 months in surviving patients, 26 patients (79%) were alive without evidence of disease. The 5-year, disease-free survival rate was 70%, and the 5-year overall survival rate was 78%. The actuarial ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence rate was 6% at 5 years.Conclusions: Patients who present with T4 breast cancer who experience tumor shrinkage and resolution of skin changes with neoadjuvant chemotherapy represent a select group of patients who can have BCT. These patients have favorable rates of long-term local control and survival. Mastectomy is not mandatory for all patients with breast cancer who present with skin involvement.Presented at the 57th Annual Society for Surgical Oncology Cancer Symposium in New York City, New York, March 18–21, 2004  相似文献   

3.
Background: To determine if aggressive treatment of locoregional recurrence affects survival, we retrospectively analyzed the clinical outcome of 69 breast cancer patients who developed locoregional disease as their first episode of recurrence following mastectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: Patients were identified from among 1,707 stage II and III breast cancer patients who enrolled in five different doxorubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy protocols at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center from 1975 to 1986. Sixty-nine evaluable patients who had a locoregional recurrence as the first site of relapse after mastectomy formed the study group. Multifactorial analysis of clinical and histopathological characteristics of both the primary tumor and the subsequent recurrence was performed using a logistic regression method. Survival analysis was performed using an actuarial life-table method calculated from the date of registration into the adjuvant therapy protocols. Results: Median follow-up was 6.6 years. Two factors significantly affected survival: recurrence of disease during or after adjuvant treatment of the primary and whether the patient was rendered disease free after recurrence. Conclusions: Stage II and III breast cancer patients who have locoregional recurrence after adjuvant chemotherapy and can be rendered disease free may have a better survival rate. Aggressive treatment of locoregional recurrence including complete surgical excision should be considered in this subgroup of patients.  相似文献   

4.
Background: The management of stage III breast cancer is challenging; it often includes multimodal treatment with systemic therapy and/or radiation therapy and surgery. Immediate breast reconstruction has not traditionally been performed in these patients. We review the results of immediate transverse rectus abdominis musculocutaneous (TRAM) flap in 21 patients treated for stage III breast cancer. Methods: Data have been collected retrospectively on 21 patients diagnosed with stage III breast cancer between 1987 and 1994. All patients had mastectomy and immediate TRAM reconstruction. Thirteen patients received primary systemic therapy, 10 patients received postoperative consolidation radiotherapy to the operative site, and 3 patients received preoperative radiation. Results: Mean follow-up for the group was 26 months. Two patients died with disseminated disease: neither of them developed local disease recurrence in the operative site; 82% of the patients followed for at least two years are free of disease. Sixty-two percent of the patients received preoperative chemotherapy, the remaining patients received postoperative multiagent chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. Two of the patients received autologous bone marrow transplants after their adjuvant therapy. Ten patients had postoperative radiotherapy for consolidation; three patients received preoperative radiation. Conclusions: Immediate TRAM reconstruction for stage III breast cancer is not associated with a delay in adjuvant therapy or an increased risk of local relapse. It facilitates wide resection of involved skin without skin grafting. Radiation therapy can be delivered to the reconstructed breast when indicated without difficulty. Breast reconstruction facilitates surgical resection of stage III breast cancer with primary closure and should be considered if the patient desires immediate breast reconstruction.Results of this study were presented at the 48th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Boston, Massachusetts, March 23–26, 1995.  相似文献   

5.
Ductal Carcinoma-In-Situ: Long-Term Results of Breast-Conserving Therapy   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Background: The role of breast-conserving therapy (BCT) in the management of ductal carcinoma-in-situ (DCIS) is controversial because of reported high recurrence rates. We reviewed our experience to determine whether the rate and pattern of locoregional recurrence after BCT were similar in patients with DCIS and patients with early-stage (T1) invasive breast tumors and whether local recurrence affected survival.Methods: Between 1973 and 1994, 87 patients with DCIS alone, 22 patients with DCIS with microinvasion (DCIS-M), and 646 patients with invasive breast cancer 2 cm or smaller in diameter were treated with BCT (wide local excision with radiotherapy) at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. Survival was calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. The median follow-up times were 11 years for patients with DCIS alone, 12 years for patients with DCIS-M, and 8 years for patients with invasive breast cancer.Results: Eleven (13%) of 87 patients with DCIS and 5 (23%) of 22 patients with DCIS-M had developed locoregional recurrences at follow-up. Two patients with DCIS with locoregional recurrence died of breast cancer. Of the 646 patients with invasive breast cancer, 56 (9%) had a locoregional recurrence, and 16 (2%) died of breast cancer. The median time to locoregional recurrence was significantly longer in patients with DCIS or DCIS-M (9–10 years) than patients with invasive tumors (5 years).Conclusions: DCIS is a favorable disease with an excellent long-term survival. The locoregional recurrence rate in patients with DCIS treated with BCT is similar to that in patients with early-stage invasive breast cancer treated with BCT, but time to locoregional recurrence is significantly longer in patients with DCIS. In patients with DCIS treated with BCT, intense surveillance for locoregional recurrence needs to be maintained for the patients lifetime.Presented at the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society of Surgical Oncology, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 16–19, 2000.  相似文献   

6.
Background: Stage IIIA,B breast cancer is commonly treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy because of high objective response rates and improved operability. Criteria for subsequent selection of local therapy—mastectomy, radiotherapy, or both—are not well defined. We adopted a policy of selective local therapy based on rebiopsy of the breast and clinical axillary lymph node status at the time of best response to chemotherapy. Methods: Between 1980 and 1993, 126 patients with stage IIIA,B breast cancer were treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and definitive local therapy. The long-term incidence of locoregional failure (in-breast, chest wall, axilla, supraclavicular, neck), relapse-free survival, and overall survival was determined. Results: The overall clinical objective response rate to chemotherapy was 95.2%. Eighty-three patients underwent mastectomy, with negative margins achieved in 91.6%. Forty-two patients had breast preservation; the overall in-breast recurrence rate was 19.0% (8 of 42 patients). The overall locoregional recurrence rate by site was: chest wall—8.7% (11 of 126 patients), axilla—8.7% (11 of 126 patients), supraclavicular—5.6% (7 of 126 patients), and neck—4.0% (5 of 126 patients). The axillary recurrence rate was 6.6% (5 of 76 patients) for clinically negative axilla treated with radiotherapy only, and 12.0% (6 of 50 patients) for clinically positive axilla treated with surgery only. The overall long-term survival probabilities (6 years) according to stage were: stage IIIA—58.0%, stage IIIBnoninflam—58.0%, stage IIIBinflam—36.0%. Conclusions: These findings support a selective approach to local therapy in patients with stage IIIA,B breast cancer. This approach provides local control in most patients, and allows for breast preservation and elimination of axillary dissection in selected patients. Presented at the 49th Annual Cancer Symposium of the Society of Surgical Oncology, Atlanta, Georgia, March 21–24, 1996.  相似文献   

7.
Background: An anticipated poor cosmetic result has traditionally been deemed a relative contraindication for breast conservation therapy (BCT). We sought to determine whether a local rotational flap could achieve satisfactory cosmesis in patients who were anticipated to have a poor cosmetic result following standard segmental mastectomy but who nevertheless desired BCT. Methods: Within the past 3 years, nine patients were treated with BCT using local rotational flap techniques. Their records were reviewed for patient characteristics, pre- and postoperative treatment, disease-free status, and patient satisfaction with cosmesis. Results: The cosmetic outcome following a segmental mastectomy was anticipated to be unacceptable due to the following features: a large previous biopsy cavity with unknown or positive margins (three patients); initial large primary tumors with unknown extent of residual disease following induction chemotherapy (five patients); and pre-existing poor cosmesis (one patient). One patient had refused modified radical mastectomy and had satellitosis from inadequately treated primary tumor (excisional biopsy with positive margins and no further therapy). The median initial tumor size was 2.7 cm (range, 1.5 cm to 5.0 cm). Final resection margins were negative in all patients. Postoperative radiotherapy was given in seven patients; one patient did not receive radiotherapy because of a pre-lupus condition and one did not require radiotherapy because her pathologic diagnosis was Paget's disease without an invasive component. Cosmesis was judged to be good to excellent by eight of nine patients. The patient who refused mastectomy was dissatisfied with cosmesis because of mild asymmetry. With a median follow-up of 24 months, only one patient has developed a local recurrence. Conclusion: Local rotational flaps composed of adjacent breast tissue are an acceptable method of achieving satisfactory cosmesis in selected patients who desire BCT.Presented at the 50th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Chicago, Illinois, March 20–23, 1997.  相似文献   

8.
Does Local Therapy Affect Survival Rates in Breast Cancer?   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Background: The goal of this study was to challenge the hypothesis that local recurrence of breast cancer does not affect survival rates, by determining whether survival rates differ for conservative and radical surgical policies. Methods: This study used prospective long-term follow-up monitoring of two contemporaneous groups of patients, within a single unit, who were treated identically except for the one variable of local treatment policy, i.e., conservative or radical. A total of 451 patients with operable breast cancer were chosen from 567 consecutive patients with breast cancer who were treated between 1970 and 1979 in the University Department of Surgery. The rate of survival 132 months after treatment was used as an outcome measure.Results: Two hundred forty-one patients were treated using a conservative approach and 210 were treated using a radical approach. At 132 months, the survival rate (58% vs. 42%) and median survival time (>132 vs. 100 months) were significantly improved for the radically treated group (P < .01). The treatment groups were comparable in terms of age, menopausal status, tumor size, histologic grading, and Nottingham Prognostic Index values. The advantage of the radical policy persisted when examined in relation to each of these prognostic factors.Conclusions: Use of radical local treatment yielded a highly significant survival benefit (comparable to that obtained with adjuvant therapy), compared with a conservative approach. This was related to a reduced locoregional recurrence rate and provides evidence that local therapy influences long-term outcomes for patients with breast cancer. High-quality locoregional control should be emphasized, as is systemic therapy, in management policies. Assessment of surgical techniques, particularly in relation to locoregional recurrence rates, should be included in all studies in which surgery is a component of therapy.  相似文献   

9.
Background: The roles of breast conservation and surgical evaluation of the contralateral breast in the treatment of lobular carcinoma of the breast remain unclear. The aim of this study was to compare local recurrence, 5-year survival, and incidence of contralateral breast cancer in women with lobular carcinoma to that in women with infiltrating ductal carcinoma. Methods: Women with infiltrating ductal carcinoma (IDC) and invasive lobular breast carcinoma (ILC) diagnosed during the years 1984 to 1994 were identified through a statewide tumor registry. The women were divided into groups based on their histology and treatment (breast conservation or modified radical mastectomy). The incidences of contralateral breast cancer, local recurrence, and 5-year survival were compared within each histologic group and treatment category. Results: During the period 1984 to 1994, 4886 women were diagnosed with invasive lobular or ductal breast carcinoma. Of these, 316 (6.5%) had infiltrating lobular cancer. The 5-year survival rates were 68% and 71% for ILC and IDC, respectively (p=0.5). The local recurrence rates were 2.8% and 4.3% for ILC treated with lumpectomy and axillary nodal dissection (LAND) and modified radical mastectomy (MRM), respectively, which were not significantly different from that obtained with IDC (LAND=2.5%, MRM=2.1%). The incidence of contralateral breast cancer during the period was 6.6% and 6.5% for ILC and IDC, respectively. Conclusions: Invasive lobular carcinoma can be safely treated with breast conservation with no difference in local recurrence or survival. In the absence of a suspicious finding on clinical or radiologic examination, routine contralateral breast intervention is not recommended.Presented at the 50th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Chicago, Illinois, March 20–23, 1997.  相似文献   

10.
Background: Patients whose brain metastases from breast cancer are treated nonsurgically have a median length of survival ranging from 2.5 to 7.5 months, and a median time to recurrence ranging from 2 to 5 months. Patients treated with radiotherapy have a median length of survival ranging from 3 to 4 months. Those treated with chemotherapy have a median length of survival ranging from 5.5 to 7.5 months. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis on 63 patients treated over a 10-year period. Only patients who underwent surgery for nonrecurrent brain metastases were studied. Sixty-one patients (97%) underwent surgery within 2 weeks of diagnosis of the brain metastases. Results: The median length of survival was 16 months (95% confidence interval [CI] 11 to 22 months), and the 5-year survival rate was 17% (CI 9% to 29%). Brain metastases recurred in 27 patients at a median interval of 15 months (CI 12 to 24 months). Eleven patients had local recurrence, 10 had distal recurrence, and seven developed leptomeningeal disease. Significant prognosticators of length of survival were age (p=0.011), menopause status (p=0.10), postoperative radiotherapy (p=0.054), preoperative neurologic status (p=0.011), and preoperative systemic disease status (p=0.0003). Systemic disease status had a significant effect on the length of survival but not on the time to recurrence. Presented at the 49th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Atlanta, Georgia, March 21–24, 1996.  相似文献   

11.
Background: Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the breast is highly sensitive for the diagnosis of primary breast malignancy. We investigated the clinical application of dedicated dynamic breast MR for routine screening for local recurrence following breast-conserving therapy. Methods: Patients underwent a single dynamic MR of the breast routinely in the period 1 to 2 years following treatment, or earlier if recurrence was suspected. A biopsy was performed if there was suspicion of recurrence on MR. Results: One hundred and five patients with a median age of 58 years (range 50 to 65 years) were recruited for the study. Sixteen biopsies were performed and nine recurrences were confirmed histologically. Patients not undergoing biopsy have been followed up for a median of 341 days (range 168 to 451 days) following the MR. The sensitivity for clinical examination, mammography, examination combined with mammography, and MRI alone for the detection of recurrent cancer were 89%, 67%, 100%, and 100%, respectively, and the specificity was 76%, 85%, 67%, and 93%. Conclusion: Combined clinical examination and mammography are as sensitive as dedicated dynamic MR of the breast for the detection of locoregional recurrence, but breast MRI is associated with a far greater specificity. Therefore, dedicated dynamic breast MRI should be used when there is clinical or mammographic suspicion of recurrence to confirm or refute its presence.Presented at the 50th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Chicago, Illinois, March 20–23, 1997.  相似文献   

12.
ObjectivesTo guide decision making in preventing over- or under-treatment in older breast cancer patients who have undergone breast conserving surgery, we analyzed prognostic factors and risk of recurrence in a consecutive series of patients ≥ 65 years old with breast cancer and identified subgroups that may benefit or not from more intensive treatment.MethodsPatients ≥65 years of age with breast cancer (pT1-2/pN0-2) treated with breast conserving surgery and postoperative radiation therapy at the Netherlands Cancer Institute (NKI) between 1980 and 2008 were identified. Endpoints were locoregional recurrence (LRR), distant metastasis (DM) and overall survival (OS). Multivariable analyses were performed using Cox proportional hazards models.Results1922 patients with a median age of 70 years were analyzed. The 5- and 10- years LRR rates were 2% and 3% respectively. In multivariable analysis there was no significant factor influencing LRR risk. Patients with low risk tumors (node negative patients with T1 and ER positive, grade 1 or 2) had lower risk of DM (HR 0.26) and better OS (HR 0.65) compared to patients with higher risk tumors (grade 3 and/or node positive).ConclusionIn elderly breast cancer patients the risk of LRR and DM is low. In patients with less favorable characteristics the risk of LRR is equally low, with a higher risk to develop DM and worse OS. Treatment in the low risk group may be minimized, while for the higher risk group adjuvant treatment could be intensified.  相似文献   

13.
Background: The local recurrence (LR) rate with skin-sparing mastectomy (SSM) and immediate breast reconstruction (IBR) has been reported as comparable to the LR rate after conventional mastectomy. However, limited data are available on the prognostic significance and management of LR following SSM. Methods: A prospective database maintained at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center identified 437 SSMs performed for 372 invasive T1/T2 breast cancers between 1986 and 1993. Results: Twenty-three LRs were identified, with a LR rate of 6.2% (23/372). Twenty-two of these (96%) presented as palpable skin-flap masses. The median time to recurrence was 25 months (range, 3 to 98 months). Fourteen patients were treated with a combination of surgery and systemic therapy. Resection of the reconstructed breast was performed in only three patients. Complete local control of the recurrent disease was achieved in 17 patients (74%). Nine patients (39%) developed distant metastatic disease. At a median follow-up of 26 months, 14 of 23 patients (61%) are alive without evidence of disease, and 7 (30%) have died from breast cancer. Conclusions: Because LR rate with SSM is low and likelihood of local control and survival is high, SSM and IBR is an acceptable treatment option for early stage breast cancer.  相似文献   

14.
Background: Recurrence in breast carcinoma follows a pattern of growth marked by local, regional, or widespread dissemination. Local recurrence may be the harbinger of systemic disease or failure of local control. Delineation of these processes may have implications in treatment. Methods: A retrospective review found 1,171 patients with stages I and II breast cancer from 1978 to 1990 treated at the City of Hope Medical Center. Results: Twenty-seven percent (n=313) of patients developed recurrences. These were classified as local, including chest wall and regional nodes (n=40), local and distant (n=63), and distant (n=210). Mean follow-up was 60 months. Multivariate analysis demonstrates tumor size was not different between the three groups, but the presence of positive lymph nodes was: local=51%, local and distant=78%, and distant=64%. The disease-free interval was longest in the local group (42 months) versus the local and distant group (23 months) and distant group (39 months). Median survival was calculated from the time of recurrence: local=90 months, local and distant=26 months, and distant=16 months. Conclusions: A group of patients with local recurrence have improved survival and do not develop distant disease. This group may benefit from aggressive surgical treatment to control local disease. These data suggest that a subset of breast tumors can act locally aggressive without metastatic potential. Presented at the 48th Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, Boston, Massachusetts, March 23–26, 1995.  相似文献   

15.
BackgroundBecause primary squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the breast is a rare disease, the standard therapy has not been established. We examined the clinical outcomes of postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy for breast SCC.Material and methodsWe conducted a multicenter retrospective cohort study. Patients diagnosed with primary breast SCC who received adjuvant radiotherapy as part of their primary definitive treatment were included. Overall survival (OS), breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS), and recurrence-free interval (RFi) were evaluated.ResultsBetween January 2002 and December 2017, 25 breast SCC patients received adjuvant radiotherapy as a primary treatment were included. Median follow-up time was 43.5 months. Three (12%), fifteen (60%) and seven (28%) patients had clinical stage I, II and III disease, respectively. Fourteen patients underwent breast-conserving surgery and subsequent adjuvant radiotherapy. Eleven patients underwent mastectomy and post-mastectomy radiotherapy. Ten patients received regional lymph node irradiation. Nine (36%) patients had disease recurrence. The first site of recurrence was locoregional in five, but distant metastasis arose in one. Concurrent local and distant metastasis were seen in two. Six cases of local recurrence occurred within the irradiated site. Seven patients died, and six of the deaths were due to breast cancer. Five-year OS, BCSS, and Rfi were 69%, 70%, and 63%, respectively. In multivariate analysis, age and lymphatic invasion were associated with increased risk of recurrence.ConclusionBreast SCC has a high incidence of locoregional recurrence and poor prognosis. Age and lymphatic invasion are significant risk factors for recurrence.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Historically, it was thought that young women with breast cancer had a poor prognosis and a high local disease recurrence rate after breast-conservation therapy. To determine the effect of breast-conservation therapy, the outcomes of young women with breast cancer who were treated at a single institution were retrospectively reviewed.
Between 1978 and 1993, 219 women ≤35 years of age with breast cancer were treated at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center and met the following criteria: no evidence of distant metastasis at the time of diagnosis, no prior treatment, and no concurrent cancers. The variables analyzed included demographics, type of surgery, TNM stage, use of adjuvant therapy, locoregional disease recurrences, distant metastases, and vital status. The median length of follow-up among surviving patients was 7.9 years (range, 1–17 years). Univariate analyses were performed using the log-rank test. Multivariate analyses were performed using the Cox proportional hazards model.
Seventy-nine patients underwent breast-conservation therapy (BCT) and 140 patients underwent modified radical mastectomy (MRM). Locoregional disease recurrences were identified in 27 cases: 12 in the BCT group and 15 in the MRM group. When patients were matched stage for stage, the type of local treatment did not correlate with the loco-regional recurrence rate (p = 0.236) or the disease-specific survival rate (p = 0.915). The five-year disease-specific survival rate was 84.2%. In the multivariate analysis, only TNM stage correlated with locoregional recurrence rate (p = 0.019) and disease-specific survival rate (p = 0.002).
This study shows no significant difference in locoregional recurrence rates or disease-specific survival rates in young women with breast cancer treated with BCT versus MRM.  相似文献   

17.
Background: Preoperative chemotherapy for stage II breast cancer may reduce locoregional tumors and provides initial treatment for systemic micrometastases. We conducted a prospective, randomized trial to evaluate the ability of intensive preoperative chemotherapy to enhance the outcome of this approach.Methods: Patients with clinical stage II breast cancer (T2N0, T1N1, and T2N1) were prospectively randomized to receive either preoperative or postoperative chemotherapy with five 21-day cycles of fluorouracil, leucovorin calcium, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FLAC)/granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor. Local therapy consisted of modified radical mastectomy or segmentectomy/axillary dissection/breast radiotherapy, according to patient preference.Results: Fifty-three women were randomized (26 preoperative chemotherapy and 27 postoperative chemotherapy). The objective clinical response rate of the primary tumor to preoperative chemotherapy was 80%, and the pathologic complete response rate was 20%. Preoperative chemotherapy reduced the overall incidence and number of axillary lymph node metastases. There was no difference in the use of breast-conserving local therapy between the two treatment arms. There were 20 local/regional or distant recurrences (9 preoperative and 11 postoperative). There was no difference in the overall or disease-free survival between the preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy arms.Conclusions: Preoperative FLAC/granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor chemotherapy was effective against local/regional tumors in stage II breast cancer but was otherwise comparable to postoperative chemotherapy.  相似文献   

18.
Background: The purpose was to determine the rate of local breast relapse in patients with breast cancer uniformly treated with partial mastectomy but without postoperative radiotherapy and without systemic adjuvant therapy. We also systematically examined the factors associated with local recurrence to determine whether a low-risk subgroup existed. Methods: A retrospective review of a prospectively followed (median, 8 years) cohort of 293 patients was performed. The end-point was ipsilateral local breast cancer recurrence. The patient's age, tumor size, nodal status, estrogen and progesterone receptor status, histology, and tumor and nuclear grade were studied, as were the presence and amount of carcinoma in situ and the presence of tumor emboli using univariate Kaplan-Meier and Cox step-wise multivariate analyses. Results: The overall local relapse rate was 26% (77 recurrences). Univariate factors significantly associated with decreased local relapse included older age, negative nodes, small tumor size, positive estrogen receptor status, and absence of tumor emboli. Significant multivariate variables were age, nodal status, estrogen receptor status, absence of comedo carcinoma in situ, and tumor emboli. A low-risk subgroup of 66 patients was defined with a 6% 10-year local recurrence rate. Conclusion: Important patient and tumor variables associated with local breast cancer relapse after breast-conserving surgery can define a low-risk subgroup.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Primary chemotherapy is being given in the treatment of large and locally advanced breast cancers, but a major concern is local relapse after therapy. This paper has examined patients treated with primary chemotherapy and surgery (either breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy) and has examined the role of factors which may indicate those patients who are subsequently more likely to experience local recurrence of disease. METHODS: A consecutive series of 173 women, with data available for 166 of these, presenting with large and locally advanced breast cancer (T2>/=4 cm, T3, T4, or N2) were treated with primary chemotherapy comprising cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and prednisolone and then surgery (either conservation or mastectomy with axillary surgery) followed by radiotherapy were examined. RESULTS: The clinical response rate of these patients was 75% (21% complete and 54% partial), with a complete pathological response rate of 15%. A total of 10 patients (6%) experienced local disease relapse, and the median time to relapse was 14 months (ranging from 3 to 40). The median survival in this group was 27 months (ranging from 13 to 78). In patients having breast conservation surgery, local recurrence occurred in 2%, and in those undergoing mastectomy 7% experience local relapse of disease. Factors predicting patients most likely to experience local recurrence were poor clinical response and residual axillary nodal disease after chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: Excellent local control of disease can be achieved in patients with large and locally advanced breast cancers using a combination of primary chemotherapy, surgery and radiotherapy. However, the presence of residual tumor in the axillary lymph nodes after chemotherapy is a predictor of local recurrence and patients with a better clinical response were also less likely to experience local disease recurrence. The size and degree of pathological response did not predict patients most likely to experience recurrence of disease.  相似文献   

20.
Background: The optimal management of contralateral breast cancer (CC) in patients previously treated with breast-conserving therapy (BCT) is unclear, as is whether these patients continue to choose BCT as the preferred treatment of their second breast cancer.Methods: Of 1328 patients treated with BCT at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center between 1958 and 1994, 63 developed a contralateral breast cancer. We reviewed the charts of these patients retrospectively, and standard demographic and treatment variables were evaluated. Survival was analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method and subgroups by 2 analysis.Results: Twenty-nine percent of the patients had a family history of breast cancer. First breast cancers were detected by patient or physician in 67% of cases and by mammogram in 17% of cases, compared to 59% and 36%, respectively, of CC (P = .04). Median time to development of CC was 61 months. Sixty percent of the initial tumors were AJCC stage 0 or I with a median size of 2 cm, whereas 74% of the CC were stage 0 or I (P = .02), with a median size of 1.5 cm. Eighty-seven percent of patients chose BCT for treatment of CC. There were few treatment-related complications. Recurrence rates were not significantly different from those of patients undergoing BCT for the initial cancer (P = .47), and 5- and 10-year actuarial survival rates after the first cancer were 93% and 76%, respectively. Median follow-up was 134 and 56 months from the time of diagnosis of the initial cancer and CC, respectively.Conclusions: Because contralateral breast cancer often is detected at an early stage, there are few treatment-related complications, and the risk of recurrence is no different from that for the initial cancer, BCT is an acceptable and desirable option for appropriately selected patients with metachronous or synchronous bilateral breast cancers.Presented at the 51st Annual Cancer Symposium of The Society of Surgical Oncology, San Diego, California, March 26–29, 1998.  相似文献   

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