Phase II trial of hypofractionated VMAT-based treatment for early stage breast cancer: 2-year toxicity and clinical results
De Rose et al. Radiation Oncology (2016) 11:120
DOI 10.1186/s13014-016-0701-z
RESEARCH
Open Access
Phase II trial of hypofractionated
VMAT-based treatment for early stage breast
cancer: 2-year toxicity and clinical results
Fiorenza De Rose1, Antonella Fogliata1*, Davide Franceschini1, Piera Navarria1, Elisa Villa1, Cristina Iftode1,
Giuseppe D’Agostino1, Luca Cozzi1,2, Francesca Lobefalo1, Pietro Mancosu1, Stefano Tomatis1 and Marta Scorsetti1,2
Abstract
Background: To report toxicity and early clinical outcomes of hypofractionated simultaneous integrated boost (SIB)
approach with Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) as adjuvant treatment after breast-conserving surgery.
Methods: Patients presenting early-stage breast cancer were enrolled in a phase II trial. Eligibility criteria: age > 18 years
old, invasive cancer or ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), Stage I-II (T < 3 cm and N ≤ 3), breast-conserving surgery without
oncoplastic reconstruction. Any systemic therapy was allowed in neoadjuvant or adjuvant setting. All patients
underwent VMAT-SIB technique to irradiate the whole breast and the tumor bed. Doses to whole breast and surgical
bed were 40.5 Gy and 48 Gy, respectively, delivered in 15 fractions over 3 weeks. Acute and late skin toxicities were
recorded. Cosmetic outcome was assessed as excellent/good or fair/poor.
Results: The present study focused on results of a cohort of 144 patients with a minimum follow-up of 24 months
(median 37, range 24–55 months). Median age was 62 years old (range 30–88). All patients had an invasive
carcinoma (no patients with DCIS were present in this subset). At one year, the highest reported skin toxicity was
G1, in 14 % of the patients; this data dropped to 4 % at the last follow-up, after more than 2 years. Breast pain was
recorded in 21.6 % of the patients 6 months after treatment, while it was present in 3.5 % of the patients at the
last follow-up, showing a significant improvement with time. Correlation between liponecrosis and boost target
volume was found not significant. Breast pain was correlated with breast volume. No pulmonary or cardiological
toxicities were recorded. After an early evaluation of clinical outcomes, only one case presented disease relapse, as
liver metastases.
Conclusions: The 3-week VMAT-SIB course as adjuvant treatment after breast-conserving surgery showed to be
well tolerated and was associated with optimal local control. Long-term follow-up data are needed to assess late
toxicity and clinical outcomes.
Keywords: Breast cancer, Simultaneous integrated boost, Hypofractionation, Volumetric modulated arc therapy
Background
Incidence of early stage breast cancer increased in the last
decade thanks to early diagnosis and screening programs.
The treatment approach with breast conserving surgery
(BCS) followed by whole-breast radiotherapy (WBRT)
has been shown to be equivalent to mastectomy in
terms of local control and survival [1–3]. Traditionally,
* Correspondence:
1
Radiotherapy and Radiosurgery Department, Humanitas Research Hospital
and Cancer Center, Milan-Rozzano, Italy
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
conventional fractionation schedules for radiotherapy
give 50 Gy in 2 or 1.8 Gy daily fractions, often with an
additional sequential boost to the tumor bed, resulting
in the overall treatment time (OTT) of 6–7 weeks [4].
Recently, there has been a shift in clinical studies toward the delivery of adjuvant radiotherapy using shorter
treatment schedules. Clinical data showed that breast
cancer might present α/β value around 4 Gy similar to
the late-reacting healthy tissues, suggesting the possible
benefit of hypofractionation in breast cancer treatment
[5]. These radiobiological points [6] inspired phase III
© 2016 The Author(s). Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
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(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
De Rose et al. Radiation Oncology (2016) 11:120
randomized trials comparing standard schedule to different hypofractionated schemes using larger doses per
treatment, resulting in shorter OTT.
All published trials have used schedules involving 13
to 16 treatment sessions to the whole breast over 3 to
5 weeks, with more than 6500 patients enrolled. Ten-year
data from these studies (Royal Marsden trial, Canadian
trial, and the START A and B trials) demonstrated that
hypofractionation is associated to equivalent or improved
outcomes (both local and distant disease control), toxicity,
cosmesis, and cost-effectiveness [7–11]. Moreover, shorter
treatment time results also in greater patient convenience
and resource efficiency.
Consequently, in 2013, the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) released a recommendation
to strongly consider the use of shorter treatment schedules in the radiotherapy adjuvant treatment for women
age ≥ 50 years old with early stage invasive breast cancer
after BCS. This is one of the “Choosing Wisely” recommendations, as part of a campaign by the American Board
of Internal Medicine Foundation to encourage the choice
of evidence-based treatments (http://www.choosingwisely.org/clinician-lists/american-society-radiation-oncologywhole-breastradiotherapy/).
Unfortunately, there are still open issues about the use of
hypofractionated radiotherapy in early stage breast cancer.
Groups most debated are as follows: young patients, patients with large breasts, patients undergoing chemotherapy
(neoadjuvant or adjuvant). Another unsolved question is
the association with sequential or concomitant boost [12].
As previously specified, ASTRO guidelines recommended hypofractionated radiotherapy only for patients
older than 50 because of a greater risk of local recurrence and distant metastases in younger patients. Despite this recommendation, the Canadian trial confirmed
the equivalence in efficacy to prevent local recurrence
for both conventional and hypofractionated schemes among
younger women, that represented the 25 % of the study
population [7]. Moreover, the British agency NICE (National
Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) considers
schedules of 50 Gy in 25 fractions or 40.05 Gy in 15 fractions as standard radiotherapy regardless of age at diagnosis
[13]. As regards large breast patients, the possible dose heterogeneity associated with large breast volumes in a hypofractionation schedule could potentially worsen the cosmetic
outcomes. At last, there are few consistent data concerning
aesthetic results and skin toxicity in (...truncated)