Treatment of locally advanced breast carcinoma with high-dose external beam supervoltage radiotherapy.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Between 1960 and 1978, 85 patients with locally advanced T3-4N0-3M0 carcinoma of the breast were treated with 5,000 to 8,000 rad of external beam supervoltage radiotherapy. Initial clinical eradication of the tumor was observed in 76 of 87 cases (87%), but the actuarial probability of local control at 6 yr was only 53%. Furthermore, the actuarial probability of disease-free survival was 25% at 5 year and 13% at 10 yr. Most of the patients eventually succumbed to metastatic breast carcinoma and the actuarial survival at 5 yr was 43% and at 10 yr, 16%. The addition of adjuvant low-dose chemotherapy, given to 13 patients, did not affect the rates of local control, survival or disease-free survival. The most common long-term complication was extensive and deforming radiation-induced fibrosis of the treated breast. The actuarial probability of 10-yr survival without a local recurrence and without severe fibrosis of the treated breast was only 17.5%. The role of adjuvant high-dose chemotherapy in the treatment of locally advanced breast carcinoma and the possible use of improved radiotherapy techniques to achieve a more effective long-term local control and a more desirable cosmetic end result are discussed.