Radiotherapy Schedule Shorter with 3D Conformal Radiation Therapy

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 17 Nov 2008
Women with early stage breast cancer who choose lumpectomy and radiation as their treatment option may be able to considerably shorten their total treatment time using three-dimensional (3D) conformal radiation therapy (3DCRT), according to new research.

Breast-conserving therapy of lumpectomy followed by radiotherapy, with its superior cosmetic result and equivalent survival outcome, is an accepted alternative instead of mastectomy for many patients with stage I or II breast cancer. A major drawback of standard breast-conserving therapy is that it is a more complicated treatment regimen requiring five to seven weeks to complete radiotherapy. Using 3DCRT to more effectively target the radiation and spare uninvolved areas of the breast, researchers were able to deliver radiation to the tumor bed site in higher doses faster, thereby shortening the post-lumpectomy treatment time to one week.

"These are very preliminary but encouraging results for women who need treatment but who also have families, careers, and other factors to consider when deciding on breast-conservation therapy for cancer,” stated Frank Vicini, M.D., chief of oncology at Beaumont Hospitals (Royal Oak, MI, USA). "We are leading a large, National Cancer Institute-sponsored clinical trial to give us more information on the benefits vs. risks of accelerated breast irradiation in one week compared to standard radiation therapy for up to seven weeks.”

The phase II study, performed by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG; Philadelphia, PA, USA) researchers and called RTOG 0319, enrolled 58 women from 24 academic and community institutions in the United States and Canada from August 2003 until April 2004. The women enrolled on the study received 3DCRT twice daily, with each dose separated by six hours, for five consecutive days. Fifty-three of the patients were evaluable for efficacy reporting with a median follow-up of 4.0 years. At four years, the disease-free survival rate was 84%, mastectomy-free survival was 90%, and overall survival was 96%. This is comparable to published rates for conventional therapy.

"RTOG is able to test innovative treatment options such as accelerated partial breast irradiation with 3DCRT in a wide variety of treatment facilities both in the community and in academic centers. This allows us to respond to the needs of community physicians and moves proven, new therapies into general practice faster,” said Walter J. Curran, Jr., the RTOG group chair, and a professor and chair of the department of radiation oncology in the Emory School of Medicine (Atlanta, GA, USA).

The study was presented in October 2008 at the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology (ASTRO) 50th Annual Meeting in Boston, MA, USA. RTOG, a U.S. national clinical trials group, is a clinical research component of the American College of Radiology (ACR; Reston, VA, USA).

Related Links:
Beaumont Hospitals
Radiation Therapy Oncology Group



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