Cancers (Mar 2024)
Does Breast Surgery Type Alter Incidental Axillary Irradiation? A Dosimetric Analysis of the “Sentinel Envahi et Randomisation du Curage” SERC Trial
Abstract
Background. An incidental axillary dose of adjuvant radiotherapy using tangential beams is usually given after breast-conserving surgery for breast cancer. The goal of this sub-study was to evaluate this incidental dose in the setting of post-mastectomy radiotherapy (PMRT) according to two different radiotherapy techniques. Methods. Patients participating in a randomized SERC trial who received PMRT in a single center were included. We collected the incidental axillary dose delivered to the Berg level 1 using different dosimetric parameters and compared two techniques using Student’s t-test: three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and volumetric arc therapy (VMAT). Results. We analyzed radiotherapy plans from 52 patients who received PMRT from 2012 to 2021. The mean dose delivered to the Berg level 1 was 37.2 Gy. It was significantly higher with VMAT than with 3D-CRT—43.6 Gy (SD = 3.1 Gy) versus 34.8 Gy (SD = 8.6 Gy) p p < 0.001. Conclusions. On the Berg level 1, PMRT gives a dose at least equivalent to the one given by post-breast-conserving surgery radiotherapy, making it possible to limit completion axillary lymph node dissections in select pN1a patients treated with a mastectomy. Modern radiotherapy techniques like VMAT tend to increase this incidental dose.
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