Breast-conserving surgery with intraoperative radiotherapy in recurrent breast cancer: the patient’s perspective

Purpose When ipsilateral breast-tumor recurrence (IBTR) following breast-conserving surgery (BCS) occurs, the cure of a potentially life-threatening disease is the main goal. If, however, this is diagnosed early, prognosis is still good and patient-reported outcomes become more important. Despite th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Breast cancer (Tokyo, Japan) Japan), 2020-11, Vol.27 (6), p.1107-1113
Hauptverfasser: Elfgen, Constanze, Güth, U., Gruber, G., Birrer, S., Bjelic-Radisic, V., Fleisch, M., Tausch, C. J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose When ipsilateral breast-tumor recurrence (IBTR) following breast-conserving surgery (BCS) occurs, the cure of a potentially life-threatening disease is the main goal. If, however, this is diagnosed early, prognosis is still good and patient-reported outcomes become more important. Despite the fact that many patients would prefer a further BCS, international breast cancer guidelines still recommend mastectomy, mainly because previous radiation implies limited options. Our comparative study evaluates the long-term quality-of-life and outcome in patients with IBTR who received BCS plus intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) versus mastectomy. Methods Patients with IBTR were retrospectively divided into three groups according to the local treatment: group 1 ( n  = 26) was treated with BCS + IORT; group 2 ( n  = 35) received a standard mastectomy; group 3 ( n  = 52) had a mastectomy with subsequent reconstruction. Outcomes were analyzed after a mean follow-up of 5 years after IBTR. Quality-of-life was evaluated by the validated questionnaire BREAST-Q in 50 patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Results Quality-of-life scores varied within the groups, ranging from 51.4 to 91.3 (out of 100 points). We observed satisfactory scores in all items, with no statistical difference within the groups. Disease-free survival of all groups did not statistically differ, and overall mortality was very low (0.9%). The postinterventional complication rate was lower after BCS (19.2% versus 34.3% after mastectomy and 30.8% after mastectomy with reconstruction). Conclusion For patients with previous surgery and radiation who demand a second BCS in the recurrent situation, this surgical technique can be offered in combination with IORT. Our long-term results imply oncological safety, lower complication rate, and good patient satisfaction.
ISSN:1340-6868
1880-4233
DOI:10.1007/s12282-020-01114-y