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After a median follow-up 15.7 years among almost 4,000 women, for half of patients who received postoperative internal mammary and medial supraclavicular (IM-MS) lymph node irradiation, the “absolute rates and differences” of heart and lung complications “were very low, with no increased non–breast cancer–related mortality, even before introducing heart-sparing techniques,” said the investigators.
The findings come from the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) trial. The investigators were led by Philip Poortmans, MD, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the University of Antwerp (Belgium).
The team had previously reported lower breast cancer mortality and breast cancer recurrence rates in the radiation group.
Women in the trial were treated from 1996 to 2004. “We expect that with contemporary volume-based radiation therapy outcomes will be even better, by improved coverage of target volumes, more homogeneous dose delivery and decreased doses to nontarget tissues,” the team wrote.
In the end, “our findings ... have important – reassuring – consequences for decision-making concerning elective lymph node treatment in breast cancer,” the researchers commented.
The study was published online on July 28, 2021, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Resolving the debate
There’s been debate for decades on whether the long-term risk associated with nodal irradiation, particularly collateral heart and lung damage from internal mammary irradiation, outweigh the benefits of better disease control, Julia White, MD, a radiation oncologist at the Ohio State University Breast Center, Columbus, noted in an accompanying editorial.
Concerns stem originally from trials conducted from the 1950s to the 1970s. In those trials, higher doses of radiation were delivered to the internal mammary node with far less precision than today. Subsequent studies have not laid the worry to rest, and protocols vary across institutions, Dr. White explained. Some treat IM nodes in high-risk patients, but others only treat the axilla and the medial supraclavicular lymph nodes.
Dr. White said the new EORTC trial “moves us one step closer to resolving the debate about the value of internal mammary nodal [IMN] radiation.”
She noted that, since 2014, advances in the field have led to an almost 50% reduction in cardiac radiation exposure during breast cancer treatment. Current guidelines recommend that internal mammary nodes “should generally be treated” as part of postmastectomy radiotherapy but that cardiopulmonary complications are still possible even with improved techniques, she wrote.
Mostly grade 1 morbidity
Women in the study had stage I-III breast cancer with axillary node involvement and/or medially located primary tumors. The median age at study entry was 54 years. The patients were treated at 46 centers in 13 countries.
The group that received IM-MS irradiation after surgery received 50 Gy in 25 fractions over 5 weeks.
The cumulative 15-year incidence of lung fibrosis was 5.7% among treated women versus 2.9% among control patients. The incidence of cardiac fibrosis was 1.9% with treatment, versus 1.1%.
The incidence of any cardiac disease was 11.1% in the radiation arm versus 9.4% in the control group.
Complications were mostly of grade 1. The only statistically significant difference in rates of events of grade 2 or higher was in the incidence of pulmonary morbidity, which was 0.8% with radiation versus 0.1% without. There were no differences in the incidence of second malignancies, contralateral breast cancer cases, or cardiovascular deaths with IMN irradiation.
The authors noted that their results conflict with a 2013 study that found a relative increase in major coronary events of 7.4% per Gy mean heart dose. The women in that trial were treated in Sweden and Denmark between 1958 and 2001.
Dr. Poortmans and colleagues noted, however, that this 2013 study and others found a proportional and not an absolute increase in risk. With a baseline risk of 10%, for instance, a 7% increase per 1 Gy translates to a total risk of 10.07%.
Also, no increased risk has been reported in more recently published trials, and a meta-analysis found no increase in non–breast cancer–related mortality with trials that began after 1988.
Still, “it seems logical to take the preexisting cardiac comorbidity of patients into consideration,” the investigators concluded. For patients with higher baseline cardiopulmonary risk factors, lower mean heart doses should be used, and such patients should undergo longer-term follow-up.
The study was funded by La Ligue Nationale Contre Le Cancer and the KWF Kanker Bestrijding from the Netherlands. The investigators and Dr. White disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
After a median follow-up 15.7 years among almost 4,000 women, for half of patients who received postoperative internal mammary and medial supraclavicular (IM-MS) lymph node irradiation, the “absolute rates and differences” of heart and lung complications “were very low, with no increased non–breast cancer–related mortality, even before introducing heart-sparing techniques,” said the investigators.
The findings come from the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) trial. The investigators were led by Philip Poortmans, MD, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the University of Antwerp (Belgium).
The team had previously reported lower breast cancer mortality and breast cancer recurrence rates in the radiation group.
Women in the trial were treated from 1996 to 2004. “We expect that with contemporary volume-based radiation therapy outcomes will be even better, by improved coverage of target volumes, more homogeneous dose delivery and decreased doses to nontarget tissues,” the team wrote.
In the end, “our findings ... have important – reassuring – consequences for decision-making concerning elective lymph node treatment in breast cancer,” the researchers commented.
The study was published online on July 28, 2021, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Resolving the debate
There’s been debate for decades on whether the long-term risk associated with nodal irradiation, particularly collateral heart and lung damage from internal mammary irradiation, outweigh the benefits of better disease control, Julia White, MD, a radiation oncologist at the Ohio State University Breast Center, Columbus, noted in an accompanying editorial.
Concerns stem originally from trials conducted from the 1950s to the 1970s. In those trials, higher doses of radiation were delivered to the internal mammary node with far less precision than today. Subsequent studies have not laid the worry to rest, and protocols vary across institutions, Dr. White explained. Some treat IM nodes in high-risk patients, but others only treat the axilla and the medial supraclavicular lymph nodes.
Dr. White said the new EORTC trial “moves us one step closer to resolving the debate about the value of internal mammary nodal [IMN] radiation.”
She noted that, since 2014, advances in the field have led to an almost 50% reduction in cardiac radiation exposure during breast cancer treatment. Current guidelines recommend that internal mammary nodes “should generally be treated” as part of postmastectomy radiotherapy but that cardiopulmonary complications are still possible even with improved techniques, she wrote.
Mostly grade 1 morbidity
Women in the study had stage I-III breast cancer with axillary node involvement and/or medially located primary tumors. The median age at study entry was 54 years. The patients were treated at 46 centers in 13 countries.
The group that received IM-MS irradiation after surgery received 50 Gy in 25 fractions over 5 weeks.
The cumulative 15-year incidence of lung fibrosis was 5.7% among treated women versus 2.9% among control patients. The incidence of cardiac fibrosis was 1.9% with treatment, versus 1.1%.
The incidence of any cardiac disease was 11.1% in the radiation arm versus 9.4% in the control group.
Complications were mostly of grade 1. The only statistically significant difference in rates of events of grade 2 or higher was in the incidence of pulmonary morbidity, which was 0.8% with radiation versus 0.1% without. There were no differences in the incidence of second malignancies, contralateral breast cancer cases, or cardiovascular deaths with IMN irradiation.
The authors noted that their results conflict with a 2013 study that found a relative increase in major coronary events of 7.4% per Gy mean heart dose. The women in that trial were treated in Sweden and Denmark between 1958 and 2001.
Dr. Poortmans and colleagues noted, however, that this 2013 study and others found a proportional and not an absolute increase in risk. With a baseline risk of 10%, for instance, a 7% increase per 1 Gy translates to a total risk of 10.07%.
Also, no increased risk has been reported in more recently published trials, and a meta-analysis found no increase in non–breast cancer–related mortality with trials that began after 1988.
Still, “it seems logical to take the preexisting cardiac comorbidity of patients into consideration,” the investigators concluded. For patients with higher baseline cardiopulmonary risk factors, lower mean heart doses should be used, and such patients should undergo longer-term follow-up.
The study was funded by La Ligue Nationale Contre Le Cancer and the KWF Kanker Bestrijding from the Netherlands. The investigators and Dr. White disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
After a median follow-up 15.7 years among almost 4,000 women, for half of patients who received postoperative internal mammary and medial supraclavicular (IM-MS) lymph node irradiation, the “absolute rates and differences” of heart and lung complications “were very low, with no increased non–breast cancer–related mortality, even before introducing heart-sparing techniques,” said the investigators.
The findings come from the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) trial. The investigators were led by Philip Poortmans, MD, PhD, a radiation oncologist at the University of Antwerp (Belgium).
The team had previously reported lower breast cancer mortality and breast cancer recurrence rates in the radiation group.
Women in the trial were treated from 1996 to 2004. “We expect that with contemporary volume-based radiation therapy outcomes will be even better, by improved coverage of target volumes, more homogeneous dose delivery and decreased doses to nontarget tissues,” the team wrote.
In the end, “our findings ... have important – reassuring – consequences for decision-making concerning elective lymph node treatment in breast cancer,” the researchers commented.
The study was published online on July 28, 2021, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
Resolving the debate
There’s been debate for decades on whether the long-term risk associated with nodal irradiation, particularly collateral heart and lung damage from internal mammary irradiation, outweigh the benefits of better disease control, Julia White, MD, a radiation oncologist at the Ohio State University Breast Center, Columbus, noted in an accompanying editorial.
Concerns stem originally from trials conducted from the 1950s to the 1970s. In those trials, higher doses of radiation were delivered to the internal mammary node with far less precision than today. Subsequent studies have not laid the worry to rest, and protocols vary across institutions, Dr. White explained. Some treat IM nodes in high-risk patients, but others only treat the axilla and the medial supraclavicular lymph nodes.
Dr. White said the new EORTC trial “moves us one step closer to resolving the debate about the value of internal mammary nodal [IMN] radiation.”
She noted that, since 2014, advances in the field have led to an almost 50% reduction in cardiac radiation exposure during breast cancer treatment. Current guidelines recommend that internal mammary nodes “should generally be treated” as part of postmastectomy radiotherapy but that cardiopulmonary complications are still possible even with improved techniques, she wrote.
Mostly grade 1 morbidity
Women in the study had stage I-III breast cancer with axillary node involvement and/or medially located primary tumors. The median age at study entry was 54 years. The patients were treated at 46 centers in 13 countries.
The group that received IM-MS irradiation after surgery received 50 Gy in 25 fractions over 5 weeks.
The cumulative 15-year incidence of lung fibrosis was 5.7% among treated women versus 2.9% among control patients. The incidence of cardiac fibrosis was 1.9% with treatment, versus 1.1%.
The incidence of any cardiac disease was 11.1% in the radiation arm versus 9.4% in the control group.
Complications were mostly of grade 1. The only statistically significant difference in rates of events of grade 2 or higher was in the incidence of pulmonary morbidity, which was 0.8% with radiation versus 0.1% without. There were no differences in the incidence of second malignancies, contralateral breast cancer cases, or cardiovascular deaths with IMN irradiation.
The authors noted that their results conflict with a 2013 study that found a relative increase in major coronary events of 7.4% per Gy mean heart dose. The women in that trial were treated in Sweden and Denmark between 1958 and 2001.
Dr. Poortmans and colleagues noted, however, that this 2013 study and others found a proportional and not an absolute increase in risk. With a baseline risk of 10%, for instance, a 7% increase per 1 Gy translates to a total risk of 10.07%.
Also, no increased risk has been reported in more recently published trials, and a meta-analysis found no increase in non–breast cancer–related mortality with trials that began after 1988.
Still, “it seems logical to take the preexisting cardiac comorbidity of patients into consideration,” the investigators concluded. For patients with higher baseline cardiopulmonary risk factors, lower mean heart doses should be used, and such patients should undergo longer-term follow-up.
The study was funded by La Ligue Nationale Contre Le Cancer and the KWF Kanker Bestrijding from the Netherlands. The investigators and Dr. White disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.