AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the benefit of post-mastectomy radiation therapy (PMRT) for breast cancer patients with minimal lymph node involvement by analyzing a large patient cohort over several decades.
  • More than half of the patients in this group received PMRT, which showed a slight improvement in loco-regional recurrence-free survival and disease-free survival, although not significant for those with higher recurrence-risk factors.
  • Ultimately, the researchers could not identify a specific subgroup of patients that would benefit from PMRT despite testing multiple prognostic models.

Article Abstract

Aim: To assess the value of post-mastectomy radiation therapy (PMRT) to breast cancer (BC) patients with no or minimal lymph node (LN) involvement.

Materials And Methods: We retrospectively analysed a French multi-centric cohort of 4283 patients treated by mastectomy and axillary dissection, with or without PMRT, between 1980 and 2013. Practices were analysed for three treatment periods (1980-1999, 2000-2005 and 2006-2013). The impact of PMRT on loco-regional recurrence (LRR), disease-free survival (DFS), BC-specific survival and overall survival was assessed in pN0-1mi patients using multivariate analyses (logistic regression and Cox model). It was subsequently assessed based on the number of clinicopathological recurrence-risk factors, generating a prognostic index (French-PMRT index), to isolate a pN0-1mi patients subgroup that might derive a benefit from PMRT. We tested the accuracy of the Cambridge-PMRT (c-PMRT) index to discriminate between patients with significantly different outcomes and the value of PMRT in each c-PMRT prognostic group.

Results: More than half of the pN0-1mi patients of our cohort underwent PMRT, which almost significantly improved LRR-free survival and DFS. Matching pN0-1mi patients based on the number of clinicopathologic recurrence-risk factors identified a higher risk subpopulation (≥3 recurrence-risk factors), but PMRT did not improve patient outcomes. Although the c-PMRT index had the potential to predict patient outcomes, its use did not help in making the decision of whether or not to use PMRT.

Conclusion: We failed to isolate a subgroup of early BC patients without LN involvement suitable for PMRT, despite studying a large cohort.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2017.10.004DOI Listing

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