Frontiers in Oncology (Aug 2023)

Axillary lymph node dissection versus radiotherapy in breast cancer with positive sentinel nodes after neoadjuvant therapy (ADARNAT trial)

  • Amparo Garcia-Tejedor,
  • Carlos Ortega-Exposito,
  • Sira Salinas,
  • Ana Luzardo-González,
  • Catalina Falo,
  • Evelyn Martinez-Pérez,
  • Héctor Pérez-Montero,
  • M. Teresa Soler-Monsó,
  • Maria-Teresa Bajen,
  • Ana Benitez,
  • Raul Ortega,
  • Anna Petit,
  • Anna Guma,
  • Miriam Campos,
  • Maria J. Plà,
  • Sonia Pernas,
  • Judith Peñafiel,
  • Carlos Yeste,
  • Miguel Gil-Gil,
  • Ferran Guedea,
  • Jordi Ponce,
  • Maria Laplana

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1184021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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IntroductionBreast cancer surgery currently focuses on de-escalating treatment without compromising patient survival. Axillary radiotherapy (ART) now replaces axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) in patients with limited sentinel lymph node (SLN) involvement during the primary surgery, and this has significantly reduced the incidence of lymphedema without worsening the prognosis. However, patients treated with neoadjuvant systemic treatment (NST) cannot benefit from this option despite the low incidence of residual disease in the armpit in most cases. Data regarding the use of radiotherapy instead of ALND in this population are lacking. This study will assess whether ART is non-inferior to ALND in terms of recurrence and overall survival in patients with positive SLN after NST, including whether it reduces surgery-related adverse effects.Methods and analysesThis multicenter, randomized, open-label, phase 3 trial will enroll 1660 patients with breast cancer and positive SLNs following NST in approximately 50 Spanish centers over 3 years. Patients will be stratified by NST regimen and nodal involvement (isolated tumoral cells or micrometastasis versus macrometastasis) and randomly assigned 1:1 to ART without ALND (study arm) or ALND alone (control arm). Level 3 and supraclavicular radiotherapy will be added in both arms. The primary outcome is the 5-year axillary recurrence determined by clinical and radiological examination. The secondary outcomes include lymphedema or arm dysfunction, quality of life based (EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-BR23 questionnaires), disease-free survival, and overall survival.DiscussionThis study aims to provide data to confirm the efficacy and safety of ART over ALND in patients with a positive SLN after NST, together with the impact on morbidity.Ethics and disseminationThe Research Ethics Committee of Bellvitge University Hospital approved this trial (Protocol Record PR148/21, version 3, 1/2/2022) and all patients must provide written informed consent. The involvement of around 50 centers across Spain will facilitate the dissemination of our results.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, identifier number NCT04889924.

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