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Clinical Trial
. 2012 Mar-Apr;11(2):97-104.
doi: 10.1016/j.brachy.2011.05.012. Epub 2011 Jul 2.

Four-year results using balloon-based brachytherapy to deliver accelerated partial breast irradiation with a 2-day dose fractionation schedule

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Four-year results using balloon-based brachytherapy to deliver accelerated partial breast irradiation with a 2-day dose fractionation schedule

J Ben Wilkinson et al. Brachytherapy. 2012 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Purpose: We present 4-year results from a Phase I/II trial using balloon-based brachytherapy to deliver accelerated partial breast irradiation in 2 days.

Materials/methods: Forty-five patients received breast-conserving surgery followed by adjuvant radiation therapy using a balloon-based brachytherapy applicator delivering 2800 cGy in four fractions over 2 days. Outcomes analyzed include toxicities scored using the NCI Common Toxicity Criteria v3.0 scale, ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence, regional nodal failure, distant metastasis, disease-free survival, cause-specific survival, and overall survival.

Results: Median age was 66 years (range, 48-83 years) and median tumor size was 0.6 cm (range, 0.2-2.3 cm). Five percent of patients were node positive (n=2), whereas 73% was estrogen receptor positive (n=33). Median followup was 3.7 years (2.4-7.0 years) with greater than 2 years of followup for all patients. Only Grades 1 and 2 chronic toxicities were noted with fat necrosis (18%) and asymptomatic seromas (42%) being the most common toxicities. Seven percent of patients developed ipsilateral rib fractures (n=3), although this was not statistically associated with maximum rib dose (p=0.31). Ninety-eight percent of patients had a good or excellent radiation-related cosmetic outcome at the time of last followup. There were no ipsilateral breast tumor recurrences or regional nodal failures; however, 2 patients developed distant metastases. Four-year actuarial disease-free survival, cause-specific survival, and overall survival were 96%, 100%, and 93%, respectively.

Conclusions: Treatment of early-stage breast cancer patients with breast-conserving therapy using a 2-day radiation dose schedule resulted in acceptable chronic toxicity and similar clinical outcomes as standard 5-day fractionation.

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