Intraoperative radiotherapy with electrons allows the substitution of conventional
postoperative whole breast irradiation with one session of radiotherapy with the same
equivalent dose during surgery. However, its ability to control for recurrence of
local disease required confirmation in a randomised controlled trial.
This study was done at the European Institute of Oncology (Milan, Italy). Women aged
48-75 years with early breast cancer, a maximum tumour diameter of up to 2·5 cm, and
suitable for breast-conserving surgery were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio (using
a random permuted block design, stratified for clinical tumour size [<1·0 cm vs 1·0-1·4
cm vs ≥1·5 cm]) to receive either whole-breast external radiotherapy or intraoperative
radiotherapy with electrons. Study coordinators, clinicians, and patients were aware
of the assignment. Patients in the intraoperative radiotherapy group received one
dose of 21 Gy to the tumour bed during surgery. Those in the external radiotherapy
group received 50 Gy in 25 fractions of 2 Gy, followed by a boost of 10 Gy in five
fractions. This was an equivalence trial; the prespecified equivalence margin was
local recurrence of 7·5% in the intraoperative radiotherapy group. The primary endpoint
was occurrence of ipsilateral breast tumour recurrences (IBTR); overall survival was
a secondary outcome. The main analysis was by intention to treat. This trial is registered
with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01849133.
1305 patients were randomised (654 to external radiotherapy and 651 to intraoperative
radiotherapy) between Nov 20, 2000, and Dec 27, 2007. After a medium follow-up of
5·8 years (IQR 4·1-7·7), 35 patients in the intraoperative radiotherapy group and
four patients in the external radiotherapy group had had an IBTR (p<0·0001). The 5-year
event rate for IBRT was 4·4% (95% CI 2·7-6·1) in the intraoperative radiotherapy group
and 0·4% (0·0-1·0) in the external radiotherapy group (hazard ratio 9·3 [95% CI 3·3-26·3]).
During the same period, 34 women allocated to intraoperative radiotherapy and 31 to
external radiotherapy died (p=0·59). 5-year overall survival was 96·8% (95% CI 95·3-98·3)
in the intraoperative radiotherapy group and 96·9% (95·5-98·3) in the external radiotherapy
group. In patients with data available (n=464 for intraoperative radiotherapy; n=412
for external radiotherapy) we noted significantly fewer skin side-effects in women
in the intraoperative radiotherapy group than in those in the external radiotherapy
group (p=0·0002).
Although the rate of IBTR in the intraoperative radiotherapy group was within the
prespecified equivalence margin, the rate was significantly greater than with external
radiotherapy, and overall survival did not differ between groups. Improved selection
of patients could reduce the rate of IBTR with intraoperative radiotherapy with electrons.
Italian Association for Cancer Research, Jacqueline Seroussi Memorial Foundation for
Cancer Research, and Umberto Veronesi Foundation.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.