Quantifying the Mitigating Effects of Whole-Breast Radiotherapy and Systemic Treatments on Regional Recurrence Incidence Among Breast Cancer Patients

Publication date

2020-09-01

Authors

van Steenhoven, Julia E.C.
Kuijer, A.
Van Maaren, Marissa C.
Roos, Marleen
Elias, SjoerdISNI 0000000388198607
van Diest, PaulORCID 0000-0003-0658-2745ISNI 000000004213151X
Siesling, Sabine
Smidt, Marjolein L
Boersma, Liesbeth J
Van Dalen, T.ISNI 0000000387114977

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Article

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite the potential for residual lymph node metastases after a negative or positive sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB), breast cancer patients rarely experience regional recurrences (RRs). This study aimed to quantify the effects of nonsurgical treatments on RR incidence among SLNB-negative (SLNB N0) breast cancer patients. METHODS: All primary SLNB N0-staged breast cancer patients with a diagnosis between 2005 and 2008 and 5-year follow-up data on recurrences were selected from the Netherlands Cancer Registry. The cumulative incidence function (CIF) for RR was calculated as the first event at 5 years, taking into account any other first-event (local or distant recurrence, contralateral breast cancer, or death) as competing risk. Cox regression analysis was used to model the cause-specific hazard of RR developing as the first event to quantify the effect of adjuvant systemic therapy and whole-breast radiotherapy (RT) on RR incidence at 5 years. RESULTS: The study included 13,512 patients. Of these patients, 162 experienced an RR. The CIF of RR at 5 years was 1.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1-1.5%), whereas the CIFs for death and other events were 4.4% and 9.5%, respectively. Cox regression analysis showed hazard ratios (HRs) of 0.46 (95% CI 0.33-0.64), 0.31 (95% CI 0.18-0.55), and 0.40 (95% CI 0.24-0.67) respectively for patients treated by RT as a routine part of breast-conserving therapy (BCT), chemotherapy, and hormonal therapy. CONCLUSION: RT as routine part of BCT, chemotherapy, and hormonal therapy independently exerted a mitigating effect on the risk for the development of RR. The three methods at least halved the risk.

Keywords

Oncology, Surgery, Journal Article

Citation

van Steenhoven, J E C, Kuijer, A, van Maaren, M C, Roos, M, Elias, S G, van Diest, P J, Siesling, S, Smidt, M L, Boersma, L J & van Dalen, T 2020, 'Quantifying the Mitigating Effects of Whole-Breast Radiotherapy and Systemic Treatments on Regional Recurrence Incidence Among Breast Cancer Patients', Annals of Surgical Oncology, vol. 27, no. 9, pp. 3402-3411. https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-020-08356-2