Accelerated partial breast irradiation using sole interstitial multicatheter brachytherapy
compared with whole-breast irradiation with boost for early breast cancer
Several randomised, phase 3 trials have investigated the value of different techniques
of accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) for patients with early breast cancer
after breast-conserving surgery compared with whole-breast irradiation. In a phase
3 randomised trial, we evaluated whether APBI using multicatheter brachytherapy is
non-inferior compared with whole-breast irradiation. Here, we present the 10-year
follow-up results.We did a randomised, phase 3, non-inferiority trial at 16 hospitals
and medical centres in Austria, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Spain, and
Switzerland. Patients aged 40 years or older with early invasive breast cancer or
ductal carcinoma in situ treated with breast-conserving surgery were centrally randomly
assigned (1:1) to receive either whole-breast irradiation or APBI using multicatheter
brachytherapy. Whole-breast irradiation was delivered in 25 daily fractions of 50
Gy over 5 weeks, with a supplemental boost of 10 Gy to the tumour bed, and APBI was
delivered as 30·1 Gy (seven fractions) and 32·0 Gy (eight fractions) of high-dose-rate
brachytherapy in 5 days or as 50 Gy of pulsed-dose-rate brachytherapy over 5 treatment
days. Neither patients nor investigators were masked to treatment allocation. The
primary endpoint was ipsilateral local recurrence, analysed in the as-treated population;
the non-inferiority margin for the recurrence rate difference (defined for 5-year
results) was 3 percentage points. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov,
NCT00402519; the trial is complete.Between April 20, 2004, and July 30, 2009, 1328
female patients were randomly assigned to whole breast irradiation (n=673) or APBI
(n=655), of whom 551 in the whole-breast irradiation group and 633 in the APBI group
were eligible for analysis. At a median follow-up of 10·36 years (IQR 9·12-11·28),
the 10-year local recurrence rates were 1·58% (95% CI 0·37 to 2·8) in the whole-breast
irradiation group and 3·51% (1·99 to 5·03) in the APBI group. The difference in 10-year
rates between the groups was 1·93% (95% CI -0·018 to 3·87; p=0·074). Adverse events
were mostly grade 1 and 2, in 234 (60%) of 393 participants in the whole-breast irradiation
group and 314 (67%) of 470 participants in the APBI group, at 7·5-year or 10-year
follow-up, or both. Patients in the APBI group had a significantly lower incidence
of treatment-related grade 3 late side-effects than those in the whole-breast irradiation
group (17 [4%] of 393 for whole-breast irradiation vs seven [1%] of 470 for APBI;
p=0·021; at 7·5-year or 10-year follow-up, or both). At 10 years, the most common
type of grade 3 adverse event in both treatment groups was fibrosis (six [2%] of 313
patients for whole-breast irradiation and three [1%] of 375 patients for APBI, p=0·56).
No grade 4 adverse events or treatment-related deaths have been observed.Postoperative
APBI using multicatheter brachytherapy after breast-conserving surgery in patients
with early breast cancer is a valuable alternative to whole-breast irradiation in
terms of treatment efficacy and is associated with fewer late side-effects.German
Cancer Aid, Germany.