J Korean Soc Ther Radiol Oncol.  2009 Sep;27(3):153-162. 10.3857/jkstro.2009.27.3.153.

Long-term Results of Breast-conserving Surgery and Radiation Therapy in Early Breast Cancer

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiation Oncology, Dongsan Medical Center, Keimyung University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea. jhkim@dsmc.or.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
To evaluate the long-term results after breast-conserving surgery and radiation therapy in early breast cancer in terms of failure, survival, and cosmesis.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
One hundred fifty-four patients with stage I and II breast cancer were treated with conservative surgery plus radiotherapy between January 1992 and December 2002 at the Keimyung University Dongsan Medical Center. According to TNM stage, 93 patients were stage I, 50 were IIa, and 11 were IIb. The affected breasts were irradiated with 6 MV photons to 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions over 5.5 weeks with a boost irradiation dose of 10~16 Gy to the excision site. Chemotherapy was administered in 75 patients and hormonal therapy in 92 patients with tamoxifen. Follow-up periods were 13~179 months, with a median of 92.5 months.
RESULTS
The 5- and 10-year overall survival rates were 97.3% and 94.5%, respectively. The 5- and 10-year disease-free survival (5YDFS and 10YDFS, respectively) rates were 92.5% and 88.9%, respectively; the ultimate 5YDFS and 10YDFS rates after salvage treatment were 93.9% and 90.2%, respectively. Based on multivariate analysis, only the interval between surgery and radiation therapy (< or = 6 weeks vs. >6 weeks, p=0.017) was a statistically significant prognostic factor for DFS. The major type of treatment failure was distant failure (78.5%) and the most common distant metastatic site was the lungs. The cosmetic results were good-to-excellent in 96 patients (80.7%).
CONCLUSION
Conservative surgery and radiation for early stage invasive breast cancer yielded excellent survival and cosmetic results. Radiation therapy should be started as soon as possible after breast-conserving surgery in patients with early breast cancer, ideally within 6 weeks.

Keyword

Early breast cancer; Breast-conserving surgery; Radiation; Survival; Failure

MeSH Terms

Breast
Breast Neoplasms
Cosmetics
Disease-Free Survival
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Lung
Mastectomy, Segmental
Multivariate Analysis
Photons
Survival Rate
Tamoxifen
Treatment Failure
Cosmetics
Tamoxifen
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