Yonsei Med J.  2003 Oct;44(5):828-835.

The Effect of Supraclavicular Lymph Node Irradiation upon the Thyroid Gland in the Post-operative Breast Carcinoma Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Yongdong Severance Hospital, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Dogok-dong, Kangnam-gu, Seoul, Korea. kbrrdoh@yumc.yonsei.ac.kr
  • 2Research Institute of Radiological Science, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 3Department of General Surgery, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
  • 4Department of Diagnostic Pathology, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

To identify the effect of post-operative irradiation to the thyroid gland in patients with breast carcinoma. Seventy seven patients with partial or total mastectomized breast carcinoma who received routine irradiation therapy (Hockey stick method: supraclavicular, internal mammary lymph nodes, and chest wall irradiation with 5, 040 rads, divided into 30 treatments) were reviewed in terms of their ipsilateral thyroid gland response. All patients had the bilateral thyroid sizes measured annually by ultrasonography before and after radiation therapy. In the one-year follow-up group (n=77), 32 patients (41.5%) demonstrated decreased ipsilateral thyroid gland size after Hockey Stick irradiation therapy (p=0.428), in the two-year follow-up group (n=37), 26 patients (70.3%) demonstrated decreased gland size after Hockey Stick irradiation (p=0.001), and in the three-year follow-up group (n=21), 15 patients (71.4%) showed a decreased thyroid gland size (p=0.005). Most the patients with breast carcinoma (32/77 at the one-year follow-up, 26/37 at the two-year follow-up, and 15/21 at the three-year follow-up) after post-operative Hockey Stick irradiation therapy showed reduced ipsilateral thyroid gland size. Routine en face treatment of the supraclavicular lymph nodes, using the Hockey Stick method, should be reconsidered.

Keyword

Breast; carcinoma; radiation; thyroid; supraclavicular lymph node

MeSH Terms

Breast Neoplasms/*radiotherapy
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Human
Lymph Nodes/*radiation effects
Radiotherapy/adverse effects
Thyroid Gland/pathology/*radiation effects
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