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Clinical and histological features of second breast cancers following radiotherapy for childhood and young adult malignancy

Authors :
Victoire Brillaud-Meflah
Stéphane Supiot
Odile Oberlin
Céline Vigneron
Florent de Vathaire
Sylvie Helfre
Anne Ducassou
Ibrahim Diallo
Nadia Haddy
Anne Laprie
Rodrigue S. Allodji
Line Claude
Charlotte Demoor-Goldschmidt
Valérie Bernier
Marc-André Mahé
Source :
The British Journal of Radiology. :20170824
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
British Institute of Radiology, 2018.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine the characteristics of early second breast cancer (SBC) among survivors of childhood and young adult malignancy treated with irradiation. METHODS: We conducted a multicenter retrospective study of women who presented with breast cancer aged 50 years or younger in nine French centers. RESULTS: 121 patients and 141 SBC were analyzed (invasive = 130; non-invasive = 11). The mean age at first cancer diagnosis was 15 years and at initial SBC diagnosis was 38 years. Bilateral disease before the age of 51 years was diagnosed in 16% of the females. The majority of SBC were invasive carcinomas (92%). Among the invasive carcinomas, 39% had a histoprognostic score of III, 3.1% overexpressed HER2 and 29% were triple negative. The proportion of triple negative phenotype SBC was higher in patients older at first cancer diagnosis [RR = 1.2, 95% CI (1.1–1.3)]. 94% of triple negative SBCs developed in breast tissue which had received >20 Gy. CONCLUSION: We found a high proportion of aggressive SBC following thoracic radiotherapy in childhood or early adulthood. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE: SBC screening is recommended by scientific societies for these child/young–adulthood cancer survivors in the same way as the one for high risk women because of constitutional mutations. Our results support these recommendations, not only because of a similar cumulative risk, but also because of the aggressive histological characteristics.

Details

ISSN :
1748880X and 00071285
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The British Journal of Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00601746cc838a98ae64e503ba5cbe3b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.20170824