CT-planned internal mammary node radiotherapy in the DBCG-IMN study: Benefit versus potentially harmful effects

Authors

  • Lise B. J. Thorsen Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark
  • Mette S. Thomsen Department of Medical Physics, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark
  • Martin Berg Department of Medical Physics, Vejle Hospital, Denmark
  • Ingelise Jensen Department of Medical Physics, Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark
  • Mirjana Josipovic Department of Radiation Oncology, Section for Radiotherapy, Rigshospitalet, Denmark
  • Marie Overgaard Department of Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark
  • Jens Overgaard Department of Experimental Clinical Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark
  • Peter Skogholt Department of Medical Physics, Vejle Hospital, Denmark
  • Birgitte V. Offersen Department of Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/0284186X.2014.925579

Abstract

Background. The DBCG-IMN is a nationwide population-based cohort study on the effect of internal mammary node radiotherapy (IMN-RT) in patients with node positive early breast cancer. Due to the risk of RT-induced heart disease, only patients with right-sided breast cancer received IMN-RT, whereas patients with left-sided breast cancer did not. At seven-year median follow-up, a 3% gain in overall survival with IMN-RT has been reported. This study estimates IMN doses and doses to organs at risk (OAR) in patients from the DBCG-IMN. Numbers needed to harm (NNH) if patients with left-sided breast cancer had received IMN-RT are compared to the number needed to treat (NNT).

Material and methods. Ten percent of CT-guided treatment plans from the DBCG-IMN patients were selected randomly. IMNs and OAR were contoured in 68 planning CT scans. Dose distributions were re-calculated. IMNs and OAR dose estimates were compared in right-sided versus left-sided breast cancer patients. In six left-sided patients, IMN-RT was simulated, and OAR doses were compared to those in the original plan. The NNH resulting from the change in mean heart dose (MHD) was calculated using a published model for risk of RT-related ischemic heart death.

Results. In original plans, the absolute difference between right- and left-sided V90% to the IMNs was 38.0% [95% confidence interval (5.5%; 70.5%), p < 0.05]. Heart doses were higher in left-sided plans. With IMN-RT simulation without regard to OAR constraints, MHD increased 4.8 Gy (0.9 Gy; 8.7 Gy), p < 0.05. Resulting NNHs from ischemic heart death were consistently larger than the NNT with IMN-RT.

Conclusion. Refraining from IMN-RT on the left side may have spared some ischemic heart deaths. Assuming left-sided patients benefit as much from IMN-RT as right-sided patients, the benefits from IMN-RT outweigh the costs in terms of ischemic heart death.

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Published

2014-08-01

How to Cite

Thorsen, L. B. J., Thomsen, M. S., Berg, M., Jensen, I., Josipovic, M., Overgaard, M., … Offersen, B. V. (2014). CT-planned internal mammary node radiotherapy in the DBCG-IMN study: Benefit versus potentially harmful effects. Acta Oncologica, 53(8), 1027–1034. https://doi.org/10.3109/0284186X.2014.925579