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OPTimizing Irradiation through Molecular Assessment of Lymph node (OPTIMAL): a randomized open label trial.

Authors :
Algara López M
Rodríguez García E
Beato Tortajada I
Martínez Arcelus FJ
Salinas Ramos J
Rodríguez Garrido JR
Sanz Latiesas X
Soler Rodríguez A
Juan Rijo G
Flaquer García A
Source :
Radiation oncology (London, England) [Radiat Oncol] 2020 Oct 02; Vol. 15 (1), pp. 229. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Oct 02.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Conservative surgery followed by breast and nodal irradiation is the standard loco-regional early breast cancer (BC) treatment for patients with four or more involved lymph nodes. However, the treatment strategy when fewer nodes are involved remains unclear, especially when lymphadenectomy has not been performed. Sensitive nodal status assessment molecular techniques as the One-Step Nucleic Acid Amplification (OSNA) assay can contribute to the definition and standardization of the treatment strategy. Therefore, the OPTIMAL study aims to demonstrate the feasibility of incidental irradiation of axillary nodes in patients with early-stage BC and limited involvement of the SLN.<br />Methods: BC patients who underwent conservative surgery and whose SLN total tumour load assessed with OSNA ranged between 250-15,000 copies/µL will be eligible. Patients will be randomized to receive irradiation on the breast, tumour bed, axillary and supraclavicular lymph node areas (intentional arm) or only on the breast and tumour bed (incidental arm). All areas, including the internal mammary chain, will be contoured. The mean, median, D5% and D95% doses received in all volumes will be calculated. The primary endpoint is the non-inferiority of the incidental irradiation of axillary nodes compared to the intentional irradiation in terms of 5-year disease free survival. Secondary endpoints comprise the comparison of acute and chronic toxicity and loco-regional and distant disease recurrence rates.<br />Discussion: Standardizing the treatment and diagnosis of BC patients with few nodes affected is crucial due to the lack of consensus. Hence, the quantitative score for the metastatic burden of SLN provided by OSNA can contribute by improving the discrimination of which BC patients with limited nodal involvement can benefit from incidental radiation as an adjuvant treatment strategy.<br />Trial Registration: ClinicalTrial.gov, NCT02335957; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02335957.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1748-717X
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Radiation oncology (London, England)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33008422
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13014-020-01672-7