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Impact of young age on local control after partial breast irradiation in Japanese patients with early stage breast cancer
Authors:Kazuhiko Sato  Yoshio Mizuno  Hiromi Fuchikami  Masahiro Kato  Takahiro Shimo  Jun Kubota  Naoko Takeda  Yuko Inoue  Hiroshi Seto  Tomohiko Okawa
Institution:1.Department of Breast Oncology,Tokyo-West Tokushukai Hospital,Akishima,Japan;2.Department of Radiation Oncology,Tokyo-West Tokushukai Hospital,Akishima,Japan;3.Inoue Ladies Clinic,Tachikawa,Japan;4.Seto Hospital,Tokorozawa,Japan;5.Health Evaluation Center,Utsunomiya Memorial Hospital,Utsunomiya,Japan
Abstract:

Background

Partial breast irradiation (PBI) is an alternative to whole breast irradiation (WBI) for breast-conserving therapy (BCT). A randomised phase 3 trial demonstrated that PBI using multicatheter brachytherapy had an equivalent rate of local recurrence, disease-free survival, and overall survival as compared to WBI. However, limited data are available on PBI efficacy for young patients with breast cancer.

Methods

We evaluated consecutive patients with Tis-2 (≤ 3 cm) N0-1 breast cancer who underwent BCT. For PBI, patients received radiotherapy using multicatheter brachytherapy in an accelerated manner with a dose of 32 Gy in eight fractions over 5–6 days. For WBI, patients received an external beam radiation therapy that was applied to the entire breast with a total dose of 50 Gy in fractions of 2 Gy for 5 weeks. Two hundred seventy-four patients with 278 lesions received PBI; 190 patients with 193 lesions received WBI.

Results

Patients aged <50 years including 98 women with 99 lesions receiving PBI and 85 women with 85 lesions receiving WBI were selected. Ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence rate was 3.0 and 2.4 % by PBI and WBI, respectively (P = 0.99). There was no significant difference in 4-year probability of disease-free survival (97.6 and 91.4 % for PBI and WBI, respectively; P = 0.87).

Conclusions

This is the first report of PBI efficacy in young patients in Asia. Although it is a nonrandomized retrospective chart review of a small cohort of patients with a relatively short follow-up period, PBI may be a better option than WBI following BCS in some young patients with breast cancer.
Keywords:
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