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To print: Select File and then Print from your browser's menu Title: Radiation Boost to Tumour Bed Improves Breast Cancer Outcomes: Presented at ASTRO |
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"Radiation Boost to Tumour Bed Improves Breast Cancer Outcomes: Presented at ASTRO" By Ed Susman LOS ANGELES, CA -- October 31, 2007 -- Adding a boost of radiation to the tumour bed of women undergoing breast cancer conservation surgery improves outcomes -- especially for cases of high-grade cancer or cancer near or at the surgical margins, according to research presented October 29, 2007 at a plenary talk to the 49th annual meeting of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiation and Oncology (ASTRO). In the Boost-No Boost study performed by doctors working under a protocol of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer, doctors determined that the risk of recurrence in breast cancer is reduced when the standard 50 Gray dose of radiation to the whole breast is supplemented with a 16 Gray dose to the excised tumour bed. An analysis of that study revealed that patients who gained the greatest benefit from the boost as women with high-grade ductal carcinoma in situ or high-grade invasive tumours, said Heather Jones, MD, Assistant Professor of Radiation Oncology at the University of Pittsburgh, Natrona Heights, Pennsylvania, United States. The researchers also found that the boost reduces risk of recurrence in cases in which cancer cells extend into surgical margins. Having a high-grade invasive tumour or having high-grade ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) in the margins of the excised tumour both increases the risk of later relapse, said Dr. Jones said The original Boost-No Boost study, published earlier this year in the [Journal of Clinical Oncology, showed that the risk of relapse was 7% after 10 years if women got the extra dose, compared to 12% without the boost. To determine which women benefited most from the extra dose, the researchers analysed tissue from a third of the 5,318 women in the larger randomised trial, said Dr. Jones, who became involved in the study during a fellowship at the Netherlands Cancer Institute in Amsterdam, Netherlands. |
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