1 / 15

Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy for Early Stage Breast Cancer

Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy for Early Stage Breast Cancer. Patrick J. Gagnon, M.D. Resident, PGY-4 Radiation Medicine, OHSU Providence Hospital Breast Conference November 5, 2008. Outline. Hypofractionation Benefits Radiobiology Disadvantages Breast Conservation

trory
Télécharger la présentation

Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy for Early Stage Breast Cancer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy for Early Stage Breast Cancer Patrick J. Gagnon, M.D. Resident, PGY-4 Radiation Medicine, OHSU Providence Hospital Breast Conference November 5, 2008

  2. Outline • Hypofractionation • Benefits • Radiobiology • Disadvantages • Breast Conservation • Current Standard-of-Care • Hypofractionated Radiation • Whelan Data – JNCI (2002) • Whelan Update – ASTRO (2008)

  3. Hypofractionation - Defined • Larger doses of radiation per treatment fraction delivering a full course of treatment over a shorter period of time compared to conventional fractionation • Typical fraction sizes: 1.8 – 2.0 Gy per day • Hypofractionation: 2.25 - >20 Gy per day • SBRT (lung, liver), pre-op rectal, glottic larynx

  4. Hypofractionation - Benefits • Reduced cost (fewer fractions, increased throughput) • Increased convenience (1-3 weeks vs 6-7) • Decreased patient travel and lodging • Increased treatment compliance and acceptance of therapy • Improved access to care • Radiobiology

  5. Hypofractionation - Radiobiology • Increased dose per fraction, increased tumor kill • Relative dose to late-responding tissues is higher than to early-responding tissues (mucosa, tumor) raising concerns about late-tissue toxicity

  6. Hypofractionation - Disadvantages • Late normal tissue toxicity • Cosmesis • Loco-regional control • Biologically equivalent dose may actually be less than compared to standard fractionation

  7. Breast Applications • Standard BCT includes lumpectomy with negative margins followed by whole breast radiation therapy • Radiation doses typically 45-50 Gy +/- lumpectomy cavity boost to ~61 Gy • Fraction sizes 1.8 – 2.0 Gy, often 33 fractions delivered over 6.5 weeks • Excellent local control and cosmesis

  8. Long-term Results of a Randomized Trial of Accelerated Hypofractionated Whole Breast Irradiation Following Breast Conserving Surgery in Women with Node-Negative Breast Cancer • Whelan et. al., Canada • Plenary session, 50th annual ASTRO Meeting, Boston • Initial data published in JNCI in 2002 • 10 year follow-up data presented at ASTRO

  9. Randomized Trial of Breast Irradiation Schedules After Lumpectomy for Women With Lymph Node-Negative Breast Cancer • Results initially reported with median follow-up of 69 months (JNCI 2002;94:1143-50) • 1234 patients, T1-2 N0 disease, lumpectomy with negative margins, 2 arm randomization • 622 received 42.5 Gy in 16 fractions and 612 received 50 Gy in 25 fractions • Primary endpoint local recurrence • Secondary endpoints were distant recurrence, cosmesis, and late radiation toxicity

  10. Randomized Trial of Breast Irradiation Schedules After Lumpectomy for Women With Lymph Node-Negative Breast Cancer

  11. Randomized Trial of Breast Irradiation Schedules After Lumpectomy for Women With Lymph Node-Negative Breast Cancer Local in-breast recurrence data from original study with 5 year follow-up

  12. Long-term Results of a Randomized Trial of Accelerated Hypofractionated Whole Breast Irradiation Following Breast Conserving Surgery in Women with Node-Negative Breast Cancer • Median follow-up now 144 months • Local Recurrence at 10 years • 6.2% (hypofrac) • 6.7% (standard frac) • Cosmesis at 10 years (EORTC Rating System) • 70% excellent (hypofrac) • 71% excellent (standard frac) • Late mod-severe skin/sub-Q toxicity at 10 years • 6% skin & 8% sub-Q (hypofrac) • 3% skin & 4% sub-Q (standard frac)

  13. Long-term Results of a Randomized Trial of Accelerated Hypofractionated Whole Breast Irradiation Following Breast Conserving Surgery in Women with Node-Negative Breast Cancer • Conclusions • Accelerated hypofractionated whole breast irradiation provides excellent long-term local control and limited late morbidity • Benefits of convenience and cost • Questions over late normal tissue toxicity remain • Standard arm does not match typical U.S. whole breast regimen (higher whole breast dose, no boost) • Cosmesis based on physician assessment rather than patient assessment • Is this the new “standard-of-care” or do we rely on our mature data and extensive clinical experience with conventionally fractionated whole breast radiation?

  14. Acknowledgements • Thank you to Dr. Cha and the entire Providence Radiation Oncology Department • Providence Breast Conference • Dr. Charles Thomas, OHSU Radiation Medicine • Dr. Carol Marquez, OHSU Radiation Medicine • Dr. John Holland, OHSU Radiation Medicine

More Related