2
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: not found

      Neoadjuvant systemic therapy in breast cancer: use and trends in radiotherapy practice

      research-article

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          Background

          The use of neoadjuvant systemic therapy ( nast) in the treatment of breast cancer is increasing, and the role of adjuvant radiation therapy ( rt) in that setting is uncertain. We sought to review and report the use of nast, its trends over time, and its relationship with the prescribing patterns of locoregional rt in a provincial cancer system.

          Methods

          Patients with stages iiii breast cancer diagnosed during 2007–2012 were identified using a provincial database. Patient, tumour, and treatment characteristics were extracted. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to assess associations with the use of nast. Kaplan–Meier and Cox regression were used for survival analyses.

          Results

          Of the 11,658 patients who met the inclusion criteria, 602 (5%) had received nast. Use of nast was more frequent in stage iii patients (53%) than in stages i and ii patients (2%). In clinically lymph-node positive patients, a pathology assessment was made approximately 50% of the time. Higher clinical tumour stage and increasing clinical nodal stage predicted for increasing use of nast and of nodal rt after nast, but pathologic nodal status after nast was not associated with use of nodal rt. A statistically significant survival difference was observed between patients in the nast and no- nast groups, but that significance disappeared in a multivariable Cox regression analysis.

          Conclusions

          This population-based study demonstrated 5% use of nast for breast cancer. Most patients received nodal rt after nast, and nodal rt was not associated with pathologic stage after nast. Findings likely reflect the realities of clinical practice and show that reliance on clinical nodal staging results in outcomes similar to those reported in the literature.

          Related collections

          Author and article information

          Journal
          Curr Oncol
          Curr Oncol
          CO
          Current Oncology
          Multimed Inc. (66 Martin St. Milton, ON, Canada L9T 2R2 )
          1198-0052
          1718-7729
          October 2017
          25 October 2017
          : 24
          : 5
          : 310-317
          Affiliations
          [* ]BC Cancer Agency–Centre for the North, Radiation Oncology Department, Prince George, BC (currently: BC Cancer Agency–Sindi Ahluwalia Hawkins Centre for Southern Interior, Kelowna, BC);
          []University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC;
          []Sweden Ghana Medical Centre, Accra, Ghana; and
          [§ ]BC Cancer Agency, Breast Cancer Outcomes Unit,
          []BC Cancer Agency–Vancouver Centre, Radiation Oncology Department, and
          [# ]BC Cancer Agency–Vancouver Centre, Medical Oncology Department, Vancouver, BC.
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: Robert Olson, BC Cancer Agency, 600 W 10th Avenue, Vancouver, British Columbia V5Z 4E6. E-mail: rolson2@ 123456bccancer.bc.ca
          Article
          PMC5659152 PMC5659152 5659152 conc-24-310
          10.3747/co.24.3558
          5659152
          29089798
          1bcbd26c-f3fa-439a-8296-900ec4d323b8
          2017 Multimed Inc.
          History
          Categories
          Original Article
          Radiation Oncology

          nodal irradiation,Breast cancer,neoadjuvant systemic therapies,radiotherapy,nodal staging

          Comments

          Comment on this article