Two new studies, published in The Lancet and The Lancet Oncology,
show that targeted radiotherapy delivered during surgery could offer a
viable alternative to current procedures - which require women to attend
daily radiotherapy sessions for weeks after surgery - for some women
undergoing surgery for early breast cancer.
Most women who undergo partial mastectomy (lumpectomy) surgery for
breast cancer also complete a course of radiotherapy delivered to the
whole of the affected breast (called external beam radiotherapy, EBRT).
EBRT has been shown to reduce the risk of cancer
recurring in the breast, but it can cause unpleasant side-effects, and
requires women to attend radiotherapy centres for 20 - 30 days after
surgery, which can cause serious difficulties for women who live far
from radiotherapy centres, especially those in remote or very rural
areas. In some cases, women who are eligible for lumpectomy may end up
undergoing full mastectomy, simply because they cannot meet the demands
of subsequent radiotherapy treatment required by partial tissue removal.
Without radiotherapy treatment, women who undergo lumpectomy are at risk
of the cancer recurring, usually either at, or near, the site of the
original tumour.
This has led several groups of researchers to investigate whether a
single dose of radiation, specifically targeted to the site of the
tumour, and delivered during or soon after surgery, might offer a viable
alternative treatment to reduce the risk of recurrence. Two articles
published today in The Lancet and The Lancet Oncology reveal new results
from two trials assessing two different methods of delivering targeted
radiation in this way.
TARGIT-A trial
In The Lancet, an international team of researchers, led by
Professor Michael Baum and Professor Jayant Vaidya, of University
College London, UK, investigated the performance of TARGIT (where
radiation is delivered to the tumour site via a miniature X-ray emitting
device) compared with a standard EBRT course of daily doses for 3 to 6
weeks. Over 12 years, 1721 women received the study treatment (TARGIT),
compared to a control group of 1730 women who received standard EBRT
treatment. The TARGIT technique was originally developed by Professor
Michael Baum, Professor Jayant Vaidya, and Professor Jeffrey Tobias, and
has been tested in 33 different centres since 1998.
The 3451 patients who participated in the final analysis were made up
from two separate strata, equivalent to two trials run in parallel. The
first included 2298 patients, 1140 of whom received TARGIT at the same
time of the initial surgery (as originally envisaged by the
researchers); these participants were compared with 1158 patients
receiving conventional EBRT. However, after receiving requests from
some clinicians, they extended the trial to include 1143 women, 562 of
whom were allocated EBRT, and 581 of whom were allocated to receive
TARGIT as a second procedure an average of 37 days after surgery
(postpathology stratum).
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The trial was intended to reflect real-life practice as far as possible,
so women who had received TARGIT at the time of surgery but were
subsequently shown to carry high risk features for recurrence also
received EBRT. Overall, about 80% patients in the TARGIT group
completed their surgery and radiotherapy under a single anaesthetic,
without needing any supplemental EBRT.
The researchers specified at the outset that if the difference in 5-year
local recurrence between the two treatments was less than 2.5% then
TARGIT should be considered "non-inferior" (as good as) standard
radiotherapy. Across all trial participants, the difference in 5-year
risk for cancer coming back in the breast (local recurrence) was within
the originally set limit of 2.5%, meaning that a single TARGIT treatment
was non-inferior to EBRT in controlling cancer. Furthermore, the
overall mortality was 3.9% with TARGIT and 5.3% with EBRT, due to
significantly fewer deaths from cardiovascular causes and other cancers.
When TARGIT was given at the same time as lumpectomy, as the
researchers originally planned, the local recurrence and breast cancer
deaths were similar in the TARGIT and EBRT groups, and deaths from other
causes were significantly reduced with TARGIT (1.3% for TARGIT vs. 4.4%
for EBRT).
According to Professor Vaidya, "The most important benefit of TARGIT for
a woman with breast cancer is that it allows her to complete her entire
local treatment at the time of her operation, with lower toxicity to
the breast, the heart and other organs Our research supports the use
of TARGIT concurrent with lumpectomy, provided patients are selected
carefully, and should allow patients and their clinicians to make a more
informed choice about individualising their treatment, saving time,
money, breasts, and lives."*
ELIOT trial
In The Lancet Oncology, researchers in Italy, led by Professor
Umberto Veronesi, of the European Institute of Oncology in Milan, report
results from a trial of a slightly different method of delivering
targeted radiation, using a device which emits electron radiation to the
tumour site (electron intraoperative radiotherapy, or ELIOT). 651
women attending the European Institute of Oncology in Milan for early
breast cancer treatment received ELIOT during lumpectomy surgery, and a
control group of 654 women received standard EBRT after lumpectomy.
The researchers distinguished between true local recurrence of breast
cancer (occurring in exactly the same site as the tumour), and
recurrence of cancer in the same breast that had been operated on
(ipsilateral recurrence). In both cases, after 5 years, recurrence was
significantly higher in the ELIOT group than the control group - 21
women (2.5%) in the ELIOT group experienced local recurrence, rising to
35 women (4.4%) when any ipsilateral recurrence was included, compared
to just four women (0.4%) in the control group who experienced any
recurrence.
Despite the different rates of breast cancer recurrence, overall
survival at 5 years did not differ significantly between the ELIOT and
control groups (34 deaths in ELIOT vs. 31 deaths in the control group);
there were no significant differences between the number of deaths due
to breast cancer, or due to any other cause.
For the patients in the ELIOT group, the researchers examined the
characteristics of tumours where relapse occurred, allowing them to
identify several features associated with recurrence, including large
tumour (>2cm), and oestrogen-receptor negative (ER-negative).
According to Professor Veronesi, "For women who receive intra-operative
radiotherapy, identifying the features most commonly associated with
recurrence of cancer in the breast that has been operated on will allow
us to identify the patients most likely to benefit from subsequent
external radiotherapy."
"Although our results show that 5-year rates of local recurrence were
significantly higher in women who received ELIOT, we need to bear in
mind that for some women, the benefits of not needing to complete weeks
of radiotherapy will outweigh a higher risk of local recurrence. It's
also encouraging that after 5 years, overall mortality rates do not
differ between women who received ELIOT and those who received standard
treatment. Advances such as intraoperative radiotherapy might help to
further improve the quality of life for patients, and the findings of
our trial will enable clinicians to better use biomolecular factors
along with traditional clinical and histopathological factors to
identify the patients who are ideal candidates for partial breast
irradiation."*
Writing in a linked Comment on both studies, Professor David Azria and
Dr Claire Lemanski of the Institut du Cancer Montpellier, France,
suggest that although it is clear that further research will be needed
to identify the patients least likely to experience recurrence of cancer
after undergoing surgery and intraoperative radiotherapy, "The new data
from TARGIT-A and ELIOT reinforce our conviction that intraoperative
radiotherapy during breast-conserving surgery is a reliable alternative
to conventional postoperative fractionated irradiation, but only in a
carefully selected population at very low risk of local recurrence."
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