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Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer

BACKGROUND: The standard treatment for breast cancer is breast-conserving surgery (BCS) with radiotherapy. If external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) can be safely replaced with intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT), it will help patients to save their breast and to have equivocal or better results in D...

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Autores principales: Hashemi, Solmaz, Javadi, Seyedmohammadreza, Akbari, Mohammad Esmaeil, Mirzaei, Hamidreza, Mahdavi, Seied Rabi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8064796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33953982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/2476527
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author Hashemi, Solmaz
Javadi, Seyedmohammadreza
Akbari, Mohammad Esmaeil
Mirzaei, Hamidreza
Mahdavi, Seied Rabi
author_facet Hashemi, Solmaz
Javadi, Seyedmohammadreza
Akbari, Mohammad Esmaeil
Mirzaei, Hamidreza
Mahdavi, Seied Rabi
author_sort Hashemi, Solmaz
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The standard treatment for breast cancer is breast-conserving surgery (BCS) with radiotherapy. If external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) can be safely replaced with intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT), it will help patients to save their breast and to have equivocal or better results in DFS and overall survival (OS). METHODS: A total of 2022 patients with breast cancer treated during 6 years were enrolled in the current study. A total of 657, 376, and 989 patients received EBRT, radical, and boost dose by IORT, respectively, according to the IRIORT consensus protocol. The primary endpoint was recurrence and death. The secondary endpoint was the role of variables in recurrence and death. RESULTS: With a mean follow-up of 34.5 and 40.18 months for the IORT and EBRT groups, respectively, there was a significant difference in DFS between electron boost and X-ray boost groups (P=0.037) and the electron radical group compared with EBRT (P=0.025), but there was no significant difference between other boost and radical groups in DFS and OS. CONCLUSIONS: IORT can be a preferred treatment modality because of its noninferior outcomes, and in some special conditions, it has superior outcomes compared to EBRT, particularly in delivering radical dose with IORT.
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spelling pubmed-80647962021-05-04 Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer Hashemi, Solmaz Javadi, Seyedmohammadreza Akbari, Mohammad Esmaeil Mirzaei, Hamidreza Mahdavi, Seied Rabi Int J Surg Oncol Research Article BACKGROUND: The standard treatment for breast cancer is breast-conserving surgery (BCS) with radiotherapy. If external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) can be safely replaced with intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT), it will help patients to save their breast and to have equivocal or better results in DFS and overall survival (OS). METHODS: A total of 2022 patients with breast cancer treated during 6 years were enrolled in the current study. A total of 657, 376, and 989 patients received EBRT, radical, and boost dose by IORT, respectively, according to the IRIORT consensus protocol. The primary endpoint was recurrence and death. The secondary endpoint was the role of variables in recurrence and death. RESULTS: With a mean follow-up of 34.5 and 40.18 months for the IORT and EBRT groups, respectively, there was a significant difference in DFS between electron boost and X-ray boost groups (P=0.037) and the electron radical group compared with EBRT (P=0.025), but there was no significant difference between other boost and radical groups in DFS and OS. CONCLUSIONS: IORT can be a preferred treatment modality because of its noninferior outcomes, and in some special conditions, it has superior outcomes compared to EBRT, particularly in delivering radical dose with IORT. Hindawi 2021-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8064796/ /pubmed/33953982 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/2476527 Text en Copyright © 2021 Solmaz Hashemi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hashemi, Solmaz
Javadi, Seyedmohammadreza
Akbari, Mohammad Esmaeil
Mirzaei, Hamidreza
Mahdavi, Seied Rabi
Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title_full Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title_fullStr Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title_short Comparison of IORT (Radical and Boost Dose) and EBRT in Terms of Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival according to Demographic, Pathologic, and Biological Factors in Patients with Breast Cancer
title_sort comparison of iort (radical and boost dose) and ebrt in terms of disease-free survival and overall survival according to demographic, pathologic, and biological factors in patients with breast cancer
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8064796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33953982
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/2476527
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