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Tumor Board

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60 y/o F with known history of Left lower extremity melanoma with lymph node ... Mammogram- no occult disease, mass suspicious for malignancy. FNA- inconclusive. A/P ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tumor Board


1
Tumor Board
  • 9/23/08

2
Tumor Board
  • EF
  • 60 y/o F with known history of Left lower
    extremity melanoma with lymph node metastases,
    presented with a palpable mass in the left breast
  • The patient denied any pain form the area
  • Denied fever, chills, as well as Nausea/
    Vomiting/ Diarrhea

3
Tumor Board
  • Vitals- AVSS
  • CVS- RRR
  • Lung- CTAB
  • Abd-soft, ND, NT, BS
  • Breast- Left Upper outer quadrant 3x1 cm
  • Firm, fixed, no mobility, minimal tenderness
  • No nipple discharge, No nipple retraction

4
Tumor Board
  • Mammogram- no occult disease, mass suspicious for
    malignancy
  • FNA- inconclusive
  • A/P
  • To OR for Excision of Mass

5
Tumor Board
  • PreOperative Dx- Mass in Left Breast
  • PostOperative Dx- Left Breast Adenocarcinoma
  • Procedure-Left breast lumpectomy with positive
    sentinel lymph (positive) and axillary lymph node
    dissection
  • Level I, II and III
  • EBL-minimal
  • Complications-none

6
Tumor Board
  • 1976, Bonadonna and his colleagues published the
    results of their landmark trial of adjuvant
    chemotherapy for breast cancer.
  • They showed that 12 months of postoperative
    chemotherapy consisting of cyclophosphamide,
    methotrexate, and fluorouracil (CMF)
  • decreased the risk of recurrence of breast cancer
    in women with positive axillary lymph nodes.

7
Tumor Board
  • Since then, many trials have been undertaken to
    answer important questions about adjuvant
    chemotherapy
  • What is the optimal number of drugs?
  • What are the most advantageous doses of the
    agents used for adjuvant chemotherapy?
  • How long should they be administered?
  • What is the role of Adjuvant Chemotherapy in
    Postmenopausal Women with lymph nodes?

8
Role of Adjuvant Chemo in Postmenopausal Women
with lymph nodes
  • Overall the current thinking is
  • Adjuvant chemotherapy offers negligible benefit
    to receptor-positive, postmenopausal women
  • Legitimate end points for discussion included
    survival as well as quality-adjusted time without
    symptoms or toxicity (Q-TwiST).
  • Other considerations included cost of therapy as
    it relates to collective benefit
  • The following analyzes how we got to this point!

9
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • Early Breast Cancer Trialists' Collaborative
    Group (EBCTCG), Gelber and colleagues2
    concluded that adjuvant chemotherapy did not add
    to survival.
  • Collectively, the EBCTCG trials enrolled more
    than 15,000 women.
  • An 8 gain in absolute survival at 15 years
    favored those receiving combination treatment
  • translated into a 19 reduction in relative risk
    of relapse with a relative death risk reduction
    of 11.
  • Unfortunately, many of these women had estrogen
    receptor (ER)-negative tumors and were
    premenopausal, so the absolute benefit in
    postmenopausal ER-positive women could not be
    measured accurately

10
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • 2001 EBCTCG update by Cole and colleagues3
    reviewed the results of 47 studies with more than
    18,000 women enrolled.
  • Women older than aged 50 years with poor estrogen
    or positive ER expression were analyzed with a
    median follow-up of 10 years.
  • Women with ER-positive tumors who received both
    chemotherapy and tamoxifen enjoyed a 6.3-month
    relapse-free survival advantage with a 2.8-month
    overall survival advantage over women given only
    tamoxifen.
  • Women with ER-negative tumors derived a 5.5-month
    relapse-free survival advantage with a 3.7-month
    overall survival advantage over those receiving
    tamoxifen alone.
  • Cole and his collaborators concluded that
    regardless of ER status, the benefits of
    combination chemoendocrine therapy were
    essentially the same.

11
  • Highlighting individual cases
  • Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group, which
    enrolled nearly 700 postmenopausal women in each
    of 3 treatment arms, one with tamoxifen alone,
    another with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen, and a
    third with radiation plus tamoxifen.
  • At a 12-year median follow-up, no differences
    were observed between the treatment arms

12
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • National Surgical Breast and Bowel Project
    (NSABP) 20,
  • showed only a 2 survival advantage at 5 years
    with chemotherapy plus tamoxifen vs tamoxifen
    alone in ER-positive tumors, but failed to show
    any benefit whether patients were postmenopausal
    or not.

13
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • NEWER trials
  • International Breast Cancer Study Group IX and
    NationalSurgical Breast and Bowel Project
    (NSABP-20) presented conflicting results.
  • The negative findings of the former trials may be
    attributable to the shorter duration of
    chemotherapy given, the fact that CMF may be more
    effective in patients with metastatic breast
    cancer, and differences in tumor biology (with a
    greater percentage of well-differentiated tumors
    found in older women).
  • If one stratifies patients according to strict
    biomarker equivalency, response to chemoendocrine
    therapy equalizes across age groups.

14
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • Chemoendocrine therapies employing
    anthracycline-based regimens have been shown to
    improve disease-free and overall survival in
    NSABP-16 and the French Adjuvant Study Group
    (FASG)-07.5
  • In the Breast Cancer Intergroup Trial 0100, which
    randomized 1500 patients to receive
    cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and 5-fluorouracil
    (CAF) plus tamoxifen vs tamoxifen,
  • 32 of patients were aged 65 years or older
  • 13 were older than 70 years of age.
  • Disease-free survival
  • at 5 years was 76 in the CAF-plus-tamoxifen arm
    vs 67 in the tamoxifen-alone arm
  • 5 overall survival difference was seen at 5
    years

15
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • After review of literature many questions arise
  • If there a significant advantage in survival with
    postmenopausal chemotherapy, at what cost do
    postmenopausal women make these gains in
    mortality
  • Quality of life
  • Complications of chemo
  • Cost of therapy
  • Problem with studies
  • Difficult to objectively compare
  • Pt have different stages of breast ca
  • Different co-morbidities
  • Differnece in age- young vs old postmenopausal

16
Adjuvant Chemotherapy
  • In general
  • No significant overall survival differences have
    been shown in ER-positive, postmenopausal women
    whether they were treated with combination
    chemoendocrine therapy or endocrine therapy
    alone.
  • Furthermore, no differences in quality of life
    (Q-TwiST) were recorded, particularly in the
    EBCTCG studies. Costs and toxicity for women
    undergoing chemotherapy are assuredly higher
  • Overall
  • Newer trials on the horizon with promising
    results contradicting some of the previous
    literaute
  • However, many of these studies are being analyzed

17
Can Radiation course in BCT be Shorter?
  • Whalen et al.
  • ASTRO American Society for Therapeutic Radiology
    And Oncology Meeting
  • 1,234 women with node-negative invasive breast
    cancer from April 1993 through September 1996 and
    randomized them to the shorter duration of
    radiation therapy or to standard treatment
  • The rate of recurrence of breast cancer after 10
    years of follow-up was 6.2 if women got 50 Gray
    of radiation over three weeks, according to
    Whalen et al
  • In women who got the standard 42.5 Gray over five
    weeks, the rate of recurrence was 6.7.

18
Can Radiation course in BCT be Shorter?
  • Because of the higher doses of radiation at each
    treatment in the shorter course, he said, the
    concern had been that there would be a higher
    rate of late side effects.
  • But in fact, he said, there was little difference
    between the arms 10 years later
  • The absolute difference between the treatment
    arms in the risk for local recurrence was 0.5.
  • 70 of patients getting the short course had a
    good or excellent cosmetic outcome, compared with
    71 in the longer arm, for an absolute difference
    of 1.5.

19
Can Radiation course in BCT be Shorter?
  • The occurrence rate of moderate and severe late
    radiation morbidity to the skin was
  • 6 in the short course
  • 3 in the long course,.
  • None of the differences reached statistical
    significance.
  • In Canada
  • shorter course has already become standard
    practice, because it offers a more convenient
    treatment schedule at about two-thirds of the cost

20
Can Radiation course in BCT be Shorter?
  • A shorter course of radiation therapy with a
    lower dose following lumpectomy is as effective
    as the longer standard adjuvant therapy for
    breast cancer

21
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • It well known in current literature that
    regarding lymph node dissection of the breast
  • level-III dissection results in a longer
    operation time with greater blood loss than
    level-I II alone
  • Complications
  • axillary vein thrombosis
  • Lymphedema
  • Nerve injury
  • Also, there is no improvement in the survival
    rate with level III dissection.

22
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • Level I- Inferior Lateral to pectoralis minor
  • Level II- Posterior to pectoralis minor
  • Level III- Medial to pectoralis minor

23
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24
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • Kodama H, Nio Y, Iguchi C, Kan N. Ten-year
    follow-up results of a randomised controlled
    study comparing level-I vs level-III axillary
    lymph node dissection for primary breast cancer.
    Br J Cancer. 2006 Oct 995(7)811-6.
  • randomised study compared the treatment results
    of level-I II vs level-III dissection in T1/2/3
    and N0/1a/1b (1987 UICC classification) breast
    cancer without distant metastasis.
  • Between 1995 and 1997, 522 patients were
    enrolled, and 514 were eligible.

25
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • Stratified into breast-conserving surgery or
    mastectomy, and then further stratified into
    level-III dissection (group-A, n258) or level-I
    dissection (group-B, n256).
  • All patients were given oral 5-fluorouracil at
    200 mg day-1 and tamoxifen at 20 mg day-1, daily
    for 2 years

26
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • Group-A resulted in a significantly longer
    operation time (77.0 vs 60.5 min, Plt0.0001) and
    significantly larger blood loss (62.1 vs 48.1 ml,
    Plt0.0001) than group-B, but in no significant
    differences in the frequencies of arm oedema and
    shoulder disturbance
  • Group-A resulted in a significantly larger number
    of dissected nodes than group-B (18.7 vs 14.8,
    Plt0.0001), but in no differences in the number of
    involved nodes (1.54 vs 1.44).

27
Level I and Level II Dissection
  • There were no significant differences in the
    10-year overall and disease-free survival rates
    89.6 and 76.6 for group-A vs 87.8 and 74.1 for
    group-B, respectively.
  • Overall, there is no benefit to level III
    dissection compared to level I II
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