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Alleviating Morbidity From Locally Advanced Breast Cancer Using a Practical and Short Radiation Therapy Regimen: Results of the HYPORT Palliative Studies.

Authors :
Chatterjee, Sanjoy
Chakrabarty, Santam
Santosham, Ritesh
Saha, Animesh
Mallick, Indranil
Arunsingh, Moses
Bhattacharya, Tapesh
Achari, Rimpa
Agrawal, Sanjit
Ahmed, Rosina
Das, Jayanta
Mahata, Anurupa
Mandal, Samar
Ray, Soumendranath
Source :
International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics. Aug2023, Vol. 116 Issue 5, p1033-1042. 10p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Locally advanced breast cancers lead to debilitating local symptoms. Treatment of these women encountered commonly in less resourced countries is not backed by strong evidence. We formulated the HYPORT and HYPORT B phase 1/2 studies to evaluate the safety and efficacy of hypofractionated palliative breast radiation therapy. Two studies (35 Gy/10 fractions; HYPORT) and (26 Gy to breast/32 Gy tumor boost in 5 fractions; HYPORT B) were designed with increasing hypofractionation to save overall treatment time from 10 to 5 days. We report the acute toxicity, symptomatic, metabolic response, and quality of life (QOL) changes after radiation therapy. Fifty-eight patients, the majority of whom were pretreated with systemic therapy, completed the treatment. No grade 3 toxicity was reported. Response assessment at 3 months showed improvement in ulceration (58% vs 22%, P =.013) and bleeding (22% vs 0%, P =.074) within the HYPORT study. Similarly, in the HYPORT B study, ulceration (64% and 39%, P =.2), fungating (26% and 0%, P =.041), bleeding (26% and 4.3%, P =.074), and discharge (57% and 8.7%, P =.003) was reduced. Metabolic response was noted in 90% and 83% of patients, respectively, in the 2 studies. Improvement in the QOL scores were evident in both studies. Only 10% of the patients relapsed locally within 1 year. Palliative ultrahypofractionated radiation therapy to the breast is well tolerated, is effective, and results in a durable response with improved QOL. This could be considered a standard for locoregional symptom control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03603016
Volume :
116
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164866125
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2023.02.008