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Nodal irradiation improved breast cancer disease-free but not overall survival

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In the modern era, nodal irradiation is necessary only for select patients.

Although the MA.20 and EORTC trials showed that regional nodal irradiation was generally well tolerated, greater risks of lymphedema, pneumonitis, and cutaneous reactions were observed.

In spite of these concerns, the MA.20 and EORTC trials indicate that some patients benefit from comprehensive nodal irradiation after axillary dissection. Treatment selection for the individual patient is the key issue. At the extremes, there is relatively little controversy. There is no rationale for nodal irradiation in patients with negative axillary nodes because nodal recurrence rates after negative results on sentinel-node biopsy are less than 1%, and isolated internal mammary metastases are very uncommon, even in patients with medial tumors. Conversely, a heavy tumor burden, as shown by metastases to four or more lymph nodes or extracapsular extension beyond the lymph nodes, is a strong predictor of increased risk, suggesting the need for nodal irradiation. The dilemma resides among patients with one to three nodal metastases, particularly when such findings are associated with a small primary tumor (< 5 cm), and parallels the controversy over postmastectomy radiotherapy in this group. Postmastectomy radiotherapy has been shown to improve survival for women with one to three affected axillary lymph nodes but only in the context of a 5-year local-regional recurrence rate of 17%, far in excess of current rates. With the use of clinicopathologic characteristics to selectively offer postmastectomy radiotherapy, 5-year local-regional recurrence rates of 3%-4% without radiotherapy are observed, and the majority of women are able to avoid radiotherapy. By extrapolation, we would consider regional nodal irradiation for patients with one to three lymph node metastases only when other adverse prognostic factors are present. These factors include an age under 50 years and tumor characteristics such as extensive lymphovascular invasion, a high histologic grade, an unfavorable molecular profile, and large size.

Dr. Harold J. Burstein is with Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham & Women’s Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, and Dr. Monica Morrow is with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Weill Cornell Medical College, New York. These remarks were excerpted from an accompanying editorial (N. Engl. J. Med. 2015 Jul 23 [doi:10.1056/NEJMe1503608]).


 

FROM NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE

References

Regional nodal irradiation was also associated with significantly better distant disease-free survival (78.0% vs. 75.0%; HR, 0.86; P = .02), and breast cancer mortality (12.5% vs.14.4%; HR, 0.82; P = .02).

The rate of pulmonary fibrosis at 10 years was higher among patients in the nodal irradiation group (4.4% vs. 1.7%, P < .001). Rates of cardiac fibrosis and cardiac disease were also numerically but not significantly higher among patients who received nodal irradiation. There were no other significant differences between the groups in other late toxic effects or performance status, the authors reported.

“Our data do not apply to patients with lateral node-negative cancers, which is the largest patient subgroup in industrialized countries,” they noted.

The MA.20 study was supported by grants from the Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute, NCIC Clinical Trials Group, Canadian Breast Cancer Research Initiative, U.S. National Cancer Institute, and the Cancer Council of Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, and South Australia. Dr. Whelan reported receiving fees for serving on an advisory board from Genomic Health and testing reagents for another study from NanoString Technologies. The EORTC study was supported by the EORTC and national health agencies. Dr. Poortmans reported no conflicts of interest. Dr. Burstein reported no conflicts of interest. Dr. Morrow reported personal fees from Genomic Health outside the submitted work.

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