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1.
Between 1980 and 1987, 115 patients with early breast cancer underwent conservative surgery and radiation therapy. Median follow-up from the date of surgery was 48 months. There was local recurrence in 5 of the 115 patients. Of this group, 67 patients were evaluable for cosmetic outcome. The overall cosmetic result was judged by a panel to be excellent or good in 61%, fair in 27%, and poor in 12%. Patients themselves found the cosmetic result to be excellent or good in 94%. Retraction of the inferior border of the breast, surface difference between both breasts, breast induration, scar retraction and telangiectasia correlated with the cosmetic score. Type of surgery, axillary irradiation, use of bolus, and length of follow-up all influenced the cosmetic outcome in a univariate analysis.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE: The role of conservative surgery and radiation for mammographically detected ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is controversial. In particular, there is little data for outcome with radiation in a group of patients comparable to those treated with local excision and surveillance (mammographic calcifications < or = 2.5 cm, negative resection margins, negative postbiopsy mammogram). This study reports outcome of conservative surgery and radiation for mammographically detected DCIS with an emphasis on results in patients considered candidates for excision alone. METHODS AND MATERIALS: From 1983 to 1992, 110 women with mammographically detected DCIS (77% calcifications +/- mass) and no prior history of breast cancer underwent needle localization and biopsy with (55%) or without a reexcision and radiation. Final margins of resection were negative in 62%, positive 7%, close 11%, and unknown 20%. The median patient age was 56 years. The most common histologic subtype was comedo (54%), followed by cribriform (22%). The median pathologic tumor size was 8 mm (range 2 mm to 5 cm). Forty-seven percent of patients with calcifications only had a negative postbiopsy mammogram prior to radiation. Radiation consisted of treatment to the entire breast (median 50.00 Gy) and a boost to the primary site (97%) for a median total dose of 60.40 Gy. RESULTS: With a median follow-up of 5.3 years, three patients developed a recurrence in the treated breast. The median interval to recurrence was 8.8 years and all were invasive cancers. Two (67%) occurred outside the initial quadrant. The 5- and 10-year actuarial rates of recurrence were 1 and 15%. Cause-specific survival was 100% at 5 and 10 years. Contralateral breast cancer developed in two patients. There were too few failures for statistical significance to be achieved with any of the following factors: patient age, family history, race, mammographic findings, location primary, pathologic size, histologic subtype, reexcision, or final margin status. However, young age, positive or close margins, and the presence of a mass without calcifications had a trend for an increased risk of recurrence. There were no recurrences in the subset of 16 patients who would be candidates for surveillance by Lagios' criteria. CONCLUSION: For selected patients, conservative surgery and radiation for mammographically detected DCIS results in a low risk of recurrence in the treated breast and 100% 5- and 10-year cause-specific survival. Improved mammographic and pathologic evaluation results in better patient selection and reduces the risk of the subsequent appearance of DCIS in the biopsy site. The identification of risk factors for an ipsilateral invasive breast recurrence is evolving.  相似文献   

3.
Breast conservation is not a commonly prescribed treatment option for breast cancer in Taiwan. We report 42 patients with 43 early-stage breast cancers who were treated with breast-conserving surgery and radiotherapy at the Koo Foundation Sun Yat-Sen Cancer Center from April 1990 to December 1994. Included in this study were 33 patients with stage I cancers and 10 with stage II. Breast-conserving surgery consisted of wide local excision and ipsilateral axillary lymph node dissection. Radiotherapy was given 2 to 6 weeks after surgery, with a dose of 46 to 50 Gy, 2 Gy per fraction per day, to the whole breast, and an additional 14 to 18 Gy to the original tumor site. Irradiation to the regional lymph nodes was not performed in patients with negative axillary lymph nodes. Sixteen out of 43 (37%) patients were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. The local control rate 3 years after treatment was 97% and relapse-free survival was 91%. The cosmetic outcome in 41 treated breasts that were rendered relapse-free by conserving treatment were evaluated and graded by the physicians as excellent, good, fair or poor using a standardized scale. Forty breasts (98%) were scored as excellent or good for their cosmetic results. Breast-conserving surgery and radio-therapy offer Taiwanese women with early breast cancer excellent local control and a highly satisfactory cosmetic outcome.  相似文献   

4.
Conservative surgery (local tumour excision) for early breast cancer gives long-term survival rates comparable to those after radical treatment. Irradiation postoperatively reduces recurrence in the breast by at least 50%. The value of irradiating the internal mammary nodes in patients whose lymphoscintogram confirms the presence of cancer in these nodes remains to be determined. Radical surgery does not improve the survival rate and excessively radical radiotherapy may induce morbidity equal to the operation it is intended to replace. The demise of radical surgery is predicted and a plea made for the use of adjuvant chemotherapy or hormonal therapy, or both, for high-risk patients following conservative treatment.  相似文献   

5.
Between 1981 and 1995, 4 patients (3 females, 1 male; aged 48-80) were diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus, following mediastinal irradiation for breast cancer. The interval between irradiation and the presentation of esophageal cancer was 10.75 years on average (7-19). The treatment consisted of: radiotherapy only; a partial esophagectomy with proximal gastrectomy without post-operative radiotherapy; laser photocoagulation for a superficial tumor; and, palliative treatment including gastrostomy, tracheal photocoagulation and chemotherapy for 1 patient suffering from advanced stage cancer with tracheal invasion, respectively. Radiotherapy of the esophageal cancer (exclusive or adjuvant) should take into account previous esophageal radiation therapy. The indications of curative excision surgery are the same as for other types of esophageal cancer, but the anastomoses should be performed in a non-irradiated area. Excision by esophageal stripping without thoracotomy is contraindicated because of the presence of peri-esophageal sclerosis. Preventive measures in radiation therapy for breast cancer are suggested.  相似文献   

6.
Breast cancer surgery is on the increase. Until now conservative treatment has been limited to tumors less than 3 cm; it is now extending to surgery on reduced tumors after chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Some cancers still require mastectomy because a carcinologic satisfactory tumorectomy would create a major deformity not compatible with conservative treatment. It is technically possible to perform major tumor resection with good cosmetic results using the reduction mammoplasty technique well known in plastic surgery. Between 1983 and 1991, 70 patients were treated at Henri Mondor Hospital for breast cancer with breast reduction mammoplasty and irradiation. We present the result with an average five years follow-up in terms of the cosmetic results relapses and survival rate. The actuarial local relapse was less than 10%, the survival with local relapse was 86% after 5 years, cosmetic results were good in 81% of cases. The association of reduction mammoplasty and radiotherapy seems to be a good extension of conservative treatment in some large breast tumors.  相似文献   

7.
The two most important factors for determining the risk of local failure and overall prognosis in colorectal carcinoma are nodal status and the depth of tumor penetration into or through the bowel wall. These features have traditionally been determined pathologically because the clinical-staging accuracy of other imaging modalities such as computed tomography (CT) has not proven sufficiently predictive of surgical staging. However, endorectal or endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) can be used to preoperatively evaluate nodal involvement with an accuracy of up to 86% (median: 80%) and depth of tumor penetration through the bowel wall with an accuracy of up to 97% (median: 85%) for effective clinical staging. This high staging accuracy is useful in managing colorectal cancer. Through clinical evaluation of the initial stage of colorectal cancer with EUS, a patient's risk of disease recurrence can best be determined and patients stratified for the most appropriate treatment. EUS can be used to select patients with lesions that can be treated with local excision or sphincter-sparing surgery, often combined with radiation therapy, in situations otherwise requiring an abdominoperineal resection. EUS can also be used to preoperatively identify patients with locally advanced or unresectable disease. Chemoradiation can then be given preoperatively, when it appears to be better tolerated and more effective than postoperative treatment. Unresectable tumors can often be downstaged sufficiently to allow their excision. In resectable disease, EUS can also identify patients at high risk for recurrence who would benefit from adjuvant chemoirradiation. EUS for precise staging or for earlier diagnosis of recurrence will further improve the clinical outcome of patients with colorectal tumors as significant advances both in surgical techniques and in combined chemotherapy/radiotherapy continue to be made and applied selectively in a stage-dependent manner.  相似文献   

8.
PURPOSE: To assess the local control and survival in patients who received pelvic irradiation for locally recurrent rectal carcinoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS: The records of 519 patients with locally recurrent rectal carcinoma treated principally with external-beam radiation therapy between 1975 to 1985 at a single institute were retrospectively reviewed. These included 326 patients who relapsed locally following previous abdominoperineal resection, 151 after previous low anterior resection, and 42 after previous local excision or electrocoagulation for the primary. No patients had received adjuvant radiation therapy or chemotherapy for the primary disease. Concurrent extrapelvic distant metastases were found in 164 (32%) patients at local recurrence and, in the remaining 355, the relapse was confined to the pelvis. There were 290 men and 229 women whose age ranged from 23 to 91 years (median = 65). Median time from initial surgery to radiation therapy for local recurrence was 18 months (3-138 months). Radiation therapy was given with varying dose-fractionation schedules, total doses ranging from 4.4 to 65.0 Gy (median = 30 Gy) over 1 to 92 days (median = 22 days). For 214 patients who received a total dose > or = 35 Gy, radiation therapy was given in 1.8 to 2.5 Gy daily fractions. RESULTS: The median survival was 14 months and the median time to local disease progression was 5 months from date of pelvic irradiation. The 5-year survival was 5%, and the pelvic disease progression-free rate was 7%. Twelve patients remained alive and free of disease at 5 years after pelvic irradiation. Upon multivariate analysis, overall survival was positively correlated with ECOG performance status (p = 0.0001), absence of extrapelvic metastases (p = 0.0001), long intervals from initial surgery to radiation therapy for local recurrence (p = 0.0001), total radiation dose (p = 0.0001), and absence of obstructive uropathy (p = 0.0013). Pelvic disease progression-free rates were positively correlated with ECOG performance status (p = 0.0001), total radiation dose (p = 0.0001), and previous conservative surgery for the primary (p = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Survival is poor for patients who develop local recurrence following previous surgery for rectal carcinoma. Pelvic radiation therapy provides only short-term palliation, and future efforts should be directed to the use of effective adjuvant therapy for patients with rectal carcinoma who are at high risk of local recurrence.  相似文献   

9.
High dose, external-beam megavoltage radiation therapy was administered to 21 patients because of incomplete excision (11 patients) or palpable local recurrence (10 patients) following radical prostatectomy. Of the 21 patients 8 were alive without clinical evidence of cancer for 29 to 97 months after radiation therapy. The best survival was in the 11 patients referred because of incomplete excision. Of these 11 patients 9 were alive, 6 without cancer, and 2 were dead of intercurrent disease without evidence of cancer. Of the 10 patients with palpable local recurrence 2 were alive without evidence neoplasm, while 2 died of intercurrent disease without cancer. Acute treatment-associated symptoms occurred in 11 of the 21 patients. Generally, these symptoms were mild and responded to conservative, symptomatic management. Two serious complications were recorded.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE: This retrospective review was conducted to determine if delay in the start of radiotherapy after definitive breast surgery had any detrimental effect on local recurrence or disease-free survival in node-negative breast cancer patients. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 568 patients with T1-T2, N0 breast cancer were treated with breast-conserving surgery and breast irradiation, without adjuvant systemic therapy between January 1, 1985 and December 31, 1992, at the London Regional Cancer Centre. Adjuvant breast irradiation consisted either of 50 Gy in 25 fractions or 40 Gy in 15 or 16 fractions, followed by a boost of 10 Gy or 12.5 Gy to the lumpectomy site. The time intervals from definitive breast surgery to breast irradiation used for analysis were 0-8 weeks (201 patients), > 8-12 weeks (235 patients), > 1216 weeks (91 patients), and > 16 weeks (41 patients). The time intervals of 0-12 weeks (436 patients) and > 12 weeks (132 patients) were also analyzed. Kaplan-Meier estimates of time to local recurrence and disease-free survival rates were calculated. The association between surgery-radiotherapy interval, age (< or = 40, > 40 years), tumor size (< or = 2, > 2cm), Scharf-Bloom-Richardson (SBR) grade, resection margins, lymphatic vessel invasion, extensive intraductal component, and local recurrence and disease-free survival were investigated using Cox regression techniques. RESULTS: Median follow-up was 63.5 months. Patients in all 4 time intervals were similar in terms of age and pathologic features. There was no statistically significant difference between the 4 groups in local recurrence or disease-free survival with surgery-radiotherapy interval (p = 0.189 and p = 0.413, respectively). The 5-year freedom from local relapse was 95.4%. The crude local recurrence rate was 6.9% (7.8% for 436 patients treated within 12 weeks (median follow-up 67 months) and 3.8% for 132 patients treated > 12 weeks from surgery (median follow-up 52 months). In a stepwise multivariable Cox regression model for disease-free survival, allowing for entry of known risk factors, tumour size (p < 0.001), grade (p < 0.001), and age (p = 0.048) entered the model, but the surgery-radiotherapy interval did not enter the model. CONCLUSION: This retrospective study suggests that delay in start of breast irradiation beyond 12 and up to 16 weeks does not increase the risk of recurrence in node-negative breast cancer patients. The certainty of these results are limited by the retrospective nature of this analysis and the lack of information concerning the late local failure rate.  相似文献   

11.
PURPOSE: Information concerning the differences between older and younger women with breast cancer, treated with standard therapy, is lacking from many prospective series. The purpose of this study is to identify factors that influence treatment decisions and determine if women age 65 and older are treated differently than younger women. The outcomes of older women would then be compared to younger to determine if treatment differences influence outcome. METHODS AND MATERIALS: The records of 558 women with early invasive breast cancer who were treated with breast conserving surgery and radiation therapy were retrospectively reviewed. Four hundred thirty-two women under the age of 65 (range: 24-64) and 126 women age 65 and older (range: 65-85) were assessed for treatment differences including breast reexcision, extent of axillary dissection, extent of breast and nodal irradiation, and the use of chemotherapy or hormonal therapy. Differences in the treatment of the two groups were determined and the end points of local control, disease-free survival, and overall survival were compared. Median follow-up was 5.5 years. RESULTS: The two treatment groups had identical pathologic TNM staging with the exception that 21% of the older age group and 5% of the younger group did not undergo axillary dissection. Women age 65 and older were less likely to have a reexcision, extensive axillary dissection, chemotherapy, or nodal irradiation. They were more likely to receive hormonal therapy. Reexcision in older women was positively influenced by a family history of breast cancer and negatively influenced by a history of previous malignancy. None of the patients who were treated without and axillary dissection suffered a regional recurrence. Although local control was better in older patients, there were no differences in disease-free or overall survival for the two groups. DISCUSSION: The findings of this study reveal that older patients have significant treatment differences as compared to younger patients; however, despite these differences, similar local control and survival were achieved at 5 to 10 years. With the expected survival of older women increasing, the prospective evaluation of treatment options for older women should be considered.  相似文献   

12.
PURPOSE: To determine whether patients with early-stage bilateral breast cancer can be treated with definitive irradiation following breast-conserving surgery with acceptable survival, local control, complications, and cosmesis. METHODS AND MATERIALS: During the period 1977-1992, 55 women with Stage 0, I, or II concurrent (n = 12) or sequential (n = 43) bilateral breast cancer were treated with definitive irradiation following breast-conserving surgery. The records of these 55 patients with 110 treated breasts were reviewed for tumor size, histology, pathologic axillary lymph node status, first and overall site(s) of failure, and adjuvant chemotherapy or hormonal therapy. Curves for survival, local control, and regional control were determined. Cosmetic outcome, complication rates, and matching technique were analyzed. The median total radiation dose delivered was 64 Gy (range 42-72) using tangential whole-breast irradiation followed by an electron or iridium implant boost. The tangential fields were matched with no overlap in 40 patients (73%); there was overlap on skin of up to 4 cm in 14 patients (25%); and the matching technique was unknown in 1 patient (2%). The median follow-up for the 12 women with concurrent bilateral breast cancer was 4.0 years. The median follow-up for the other 43 women with sequential cancer was 9.3 and 4.9 years, respectively, after the first and second cancers. RESULTS: For the overall group of 55 patients, the 5- and 10-year overall survival rates were 96% and 94%, respectively, after treatment of the first cancer, and 96% and 92%, respectively, after treatment of the second cancer. The 5- and 10-year actuarial relapse-free survival rates were 90% and 75%, respectively, after treatment of the first cancer, and 83% and 72%, respectively, after treatment of the second cancer. For the 110 treated breast cancers, the 5- and 10-year actuarial local failure rates were 5% and 15%, respectively. Complication rates were: 28% breast edema, 8% arm edema, 4% pneumonitis, 3% cellulitis, 1% rib fracture, and 1% brachial plexopathy; no patient developed matchline fibrosis. For patients with a minimum of 3 years of relapse-free follow-up, the rate of excellent or good cosmetic outcome for 104 treated breasts was 85%. CONCLUSION: Definitive irradiation after breast-conserving surgery is technically feasible for selected patients with concurrent or sequential early-stage bilateral breast cancer. Survival, local control, complication rates, and cosmetic outcomes appear comparable to historical reports of breast conservation treatment for unilateral disease. Bilateral definitive breast irradiation after breast-conservation surgery should be considered an acceptable alternative treatment to bilateral mastectomy for selected patients with concurrent or sequential early-stage bilateral breast cancer.  相似文献   

13.
Our purpose was to examine the role of radiotherapy in the management of phyllodes tumor of the breast. Eight patients were treated with adjuvant radiotherapy for nonmetastatic phyllodes tumor of the breast at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center between December 1988-August 1993. Tumors were classified as benign (n=2), borderline (indeterminate; n=1), or malignant (n=5). Median follow-up was 36.5 months. Primary surgery consisted of either lumpectomy in 2 patients or mastectomy in 6 patients. Seven patients received adjuvant radiation therapy to the breast or chest wall to a dose of 60 Gy. One patient received 50 Gy to the breast, followed by an interstitial boost of 20 Gy for a total of 70 Gy. Radiotherapy was administered for a combination of reasons, including bulky tumor volume, positive margins, recurrence, and/or malignant histology. There were no local or distant failures. This retrospective review suggests that adjuvant radiotherapy may be underutilized in the treatment of phyllodes tumor of the breast, particularly in patients with adverse features. Although treatment to the breast or chest wall (not the lymphatics) to a dose of 60 Gy appears effective, a dose-response has not been established, and lower doses (50-60 Gy) may be equally effective.  相似文献   

14.
INTRODUCTION: In the last 25 years, random trials on the advantages of combined surgery and irradiation/chemotherapy of breast cancer demonstrated similar survival rates to those of massive surgery. However, both irradiation and chemotherapy have advanced and now yield good local control of the disease, so that even large breast cancers can be made operable. Breast cancer follow-up is carried out with imaging and clinical examinations to detect early locoregional recurrences, contralateral lesions and distant recurrences: to this purpose, we carried out a comparative study of all imaging modalities. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the data of 42 breast cancer (T2-T3 N0-N+) patients of the Senology Center of the Catholic University (Rome, Italy) treated with irradiation and/or chemotherapy for tumor debulking to permit conservative surgery. We investigated the sensitivity and the indications of mammography, B-mode and color Doppler US and MRI in measuring the exact tumor size and detecting locoregional metastatic nodes. RESULTS: After 3 years' treatment, our recurrence rate (19%) is a little higher than those in the major international trials (4.2-9% and 5 tears). The recurrence was on the surgical scar in 75% of cases (6/8), while multifocal tumors were found in 25% of cases. US was the most accurate method in measuring tumor size in 90% of cases (18/20), while mammography frequently overstaged the lesion and yielded exact measurements in 65% of cases (13/20). MRI was as accurate as US, but this technique is too expensive and little available in Italy. US accurately diagnosed lymph node recurrences (70% sensitivity), but MR rate was even higher (80%), while mammography and color Doppler US had only 5-10%. As for treatment outcome, an irregular and blurred nodule or multifocal lesions at mammography indicate poor/no response, while a much smaller radial scar than at previous similar follow-ups indicates treatment success. CONCLUSIONS: When correctly integrated, mammographic, US and MR patterns permit exact tumor size measurement and show possible locoregional lymph node involvement in the patients submitted to conservative surgery and irradiation/chemotherapy. In contrast, color Doppler findings remain poorly specific in this disease, with about 55% sensitivity. Therefore, radiologic studies, with clinical and laboratory data, have a major prognostic value in assessing the biological response to combined treatment.  相似文献   

15.
As many as a third of patients with rectal cancers may be candidates for sphincter preservation surgery. The goal of the conservative management of adenocarcinoma of the distal rectum is to preserve rectal sphincter function without sacrificing local tumor control. To achieve this goal, a combined modality approach is necessary because multimodality therapy for more advanced disease has improved both local control and survival. Candidates for local excision are those with adenocarcinomas with a maximal diameter of less than 4 cm, mobile, and not poorly differentiated or mucinous and within 10 cm of the anal verge--usually within 6 cm. These criteria should be defined objectively by biopsy combined with state-of-the-art endorectal imaging. Newer molecular markers that are associated with prognosis and response to therapy may also be important for assessing prognosis, probability of local recurrence, and whether conservative treatment is appropriate. Patients with T0-3 N0 lesions meeting these standard clinicopathologic criteria have been treated successfully with wide local excision combined with chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Patients with larger or more advanced lesions may undergo low anterior resection with coloanal anastomosis. After resection, radiotherapy to at least 45 to 50 Gy is delivered to the pelvis and tumor bed often with concomitant chemotherapy. The overall rate of local failure in prospective single-institution trials in which local excision is performed with postoperative chemoradiotherapy has been 5% for T1 lesions, 7% for T2 lesions and 24% for T3 lesions. Although single-institution studies have supported the concept of conservative therapy, the safety and efficacy of this approach must still be confirmed in a multicenter, prospective trial, such as that underway in several of the cooperative oncology groups, before it may be considered a standard of practice.  相似文献   

16.
Pulmonary cancer is a major problem as much in terms of public health as for treatment. Radiotherapy plays an important therapeutic role. For a long time it has been used to treat inoperable tumours and for palliation, none the less in certain clinical situations it can be used as an alternative cure: in that case it's most often integrated with surgery and-or chemotherapy. Modern techniques of localization and of planning treatment have been briefly reviewed. In small cell cancer the survival is improved, as well as local control by thoracic irradiation. Current research has produced new knowledge in radiobiology which is opening up new therapeutic possibilities in the treatment of this disease. Various schemas for fractionating the radiotherapy and its sophisticated integration with chemotherapy have enable notable progress. Non-small cell bronchial cancer presents a particular challenge on account of its relative insensitivity to chemotherapy. Treatment is based on surgery and radiotherapy. Radiotherapy is a useful alternative to surgery for those patients who are inoperable on account of poor respiratory function. For cancer which has advanced locally new strategies of induction by associating radiotherapy and chemotherapy prior to surgery are under evaluation. Numerous cases of advanced disease are typically treated with radiotherapy alone. New schemas for hyperfractioning are giving rise to promising results and are clearly beneficial in combination with other therapeutic approaches. The side effects of thoracic irradiation can be controlled; the most serious can be prevented by careful attention to the volume treated and to the technique of irradiation. Radiotherapy offers an effective alternative and has a good cost effective relationship for the palliative treatment of metastatic lesions. The optimal use of these local and systemic therapies would enable an improvement in the evolution of the disease in these patients with pulmonary cancer.  相似文献   

17.
PURPOSE: Local recurrence is a significant problem following primary surgery for advanced vulva carcinoma. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the impact of adjuvant vulvar radiation on local control in high risk patients and the impact of local recurrence on overall survival. METHODS AND MATERIALS: From 1980-1994, 62 patients with invasive vulva carcinoma and either positive or close (less 8 mm) margins of excision were retrospectively studied. Thirty-one patients were treated with adjuvant radiation therapy to the vulva and 31 patients were observed after surgery. Kaplan-Meier estimates and the Cox proportional hazard regression model were used to evaluate the effect of adjuvant radiation therapy on local recurrence and overall survival. Independent prognostic factors for local recurrence and survival were also assessed. RESULTS: Local recurrence occurred in 58% of observed patients and 16% in patients treated with adjuvant radiation therapy. Adjuvant radiation therapy significantly reduced local recurrence rates in both the close margin and positive margin groups (p = 0.036, p = 0.0048). On both univariate and multivariate analysis adjuvant radiation and margins of excision were significant prognostic predictors for local control. Significant determinants of actuarial survival included International Federation of Gynecologists and Obstetricians (FIGO) stage, percentage of pathologically positive inguinal nodes and margins of excision. The positive margin observed group had a significantly poorer actuarial 5 year survival than the other groups (p = 0.0016) and adjuvant radiation significantly improved survival for this group. The 2 year actuarial survival after developing local recurrence was 25%. Local recurrence was a significant predictor for death from vulva carcinoma (risk ratio 3.54). CONCLUSION: Local recurrence is a common occurrence in high risk patients. In this study adjuvant radiation therapy significantly reduced local recurrence rates and may improve overall survival in certain subgroups. As salvage rates after developing local recurrence are poor adjuvant vulvar radiation should be considered for patients at risk after primary surgery.  相似文献   

18.
The purpose of this study was to examine the meaning of local control, especially on survival, in breast cancer patients treated by lumpectomy with or without radiotherapy. We analyzed the survival results of four major published randomized trials that compare conservation surgery with or without radiation using three different statistical approaches: p-values, confidence intervals, and Bayesian techniques. All four trials report statistically significant increased local control and improved survival for the irradiated patients. Survival based on p-values and confidence intervals shows statistical significance for long-term follow-up of the NSABP-B06 trial, but not for the other trials, probably because of small sample sizes and short follow-up. At 10 years, the overall survival rates for the NSABP-B06 were 65% and 71% for lumpectomy alone or with radiation respectively. Interpreted in a Bayesian framework, the expected advantage in 10-year survival was 6% (the mean of NSABP-B06 10-year survival) with an 83% probability that the 10-year survival difference may lie between 2% and 10%. An 85% probability that 3% of patients will survive at 10 years because of irradiation translates into a 30% reduction in annual odds of death several years after treatment in stage I good prognosis patients and 15% in stage I poor prognosis patients. Analysis of the randomized trials comparing lumpectomy with or without radiation indicate a clear improvement in survival for the irradiated patients associated with increased local control. Combination of improved survival with the reduced psychological and economic costs associated with local recurrence argues well for the inclusion of radiation for many breast cancer patients.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: There has been increasing interest in the use of sphincter-preserving therapy for patients with distal rectal carcinomas. The outcomes of conservative treatments for early stage rectal carcinoma appear to be comparable to that achieved with abdominoperineal resection. METHODS: Retrospective and prospective clinical series of patients with distal rectal carcinoma treated by local excision alone, local excision with postoperative adjuvant therapy, preoperative radiation followed by local excision, or radical circumferential sphincter-sparing surgeries were reviewed. The local control rates, salvage rates, and treatment complications in patients treated by these various methods were examined. RESULTS: Patients with T1 distal rectal carcinoma with favorable clinical and histopathologic characteristics treated with local excision alone had a local control rate of greater than 90% in most series. Postoperative chemoradiation improved local control for those with T1 disease with unfavorable characteristics, or those with T2 disease. Most T3 patients had failure rates of greater than 30% despite adjuvant local and systemic therapy. With high dose preoperative radiation, approximately 80% of patients with locally advanced or unresectable tumors were able to undergo sphincter-preservation treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with favorable T1 rectal carcinoma are likely to be adequately treated with local excision alone. Patients with T1 disease with unfavorable characteristics as well as T2 patients will benefit from postoperative chemoradiation. The use of local therapy in T3 patients needs to be carefully considered because these patients are at relatively high risk for local recurrence despite adjuvant therapy. Preoperative radiation followed by either local excision or radical circumferential sphincter-sparing resections appears promising in allowing sphincter preservation in patients with locally advanced tumors.  相似文献   

20.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of breast-conserving therapy for young women with a family history (FH) suggestive of inherited breast cancer susceptibility. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 201 patients aged 36 or younger at diagnosis treated with breast-conserving surgery and radiation therapy (> or = 60 Gy) for early-stage breast cancer were categorized by FH. FH was considered positive in 29 patients who, at the time of diagnosis, had a mother or sister previously diagnosed with breast cancer before age 50 or ovarian cancer at any age. Clinical, pathologic, and demographic variables; sites of first failure; disease-free survival; and overall survival (OS) were compared between FH-positive and -negative groups. Median follow-up time was 11 years. RESULTS: Patient and tumor features were similar between those with and without an FH. Regression analysis of sites of first failure at 5 years demonstrated a risk ratio (RR) of 5.7 for opposite breast cancer for FH-positive patients. Rates of local, regional, and distant failure and disease-free survival or OS did not differ between FH-positive and -negative patients. Age at diagnosis and Ashkenazi heritage were not significantly predictors of patterns of failure. CONCLUSION: Breast-conserving surgery combined with radiation therapy is not associated with a higher rate of local recurrence, distant failure, or second (non-breast) cancers in young women with an FH suggestive of inherited breast cancer susceptibility compared with young women without an FH. However, their increased risk of opposite breast cancer should be taken into account when considering breast conservation as a treatment option.  相似文献   

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