Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer

Abstract Background The internal mammary (IM) lymph node chain, along with the axillary nodal basin, is a first-echelon breast lymphatic draining site. A growing body of evidence supports irradiation of this region in node-positive breast cancer. This study evaluated the effectiveness of radiotherap...

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Main Authors: Sean Sachdev, Chelain R. Goodman, Erin Neuschler, Kapila Kalakota, Daniel Cutright, Eric D. Donnelly, John P. Hayes, Adam E. Prescott, Gianna Mirabelli, Jonathan B. Strauss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:Radiation Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0934-5
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spelling doaj-40a80c582de84341b07869022935c3db2020-11-25T00:03:26ZengBMCRadiation Oncology1748-717X2017-12-011211710.1186/s13014-017-0934-5Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancerSean Sachdev0Chelain R. Goodman1Erin Neuschler2Kapila Kalakota3Daniel Cutright4Eric D. Donnelly5John P. Hayes6Adam E. Prescott7Gianna Mirabelli8Jonathan B. Strauss9Department of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDivision of Breast Imaging, Department of Radiology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of MedicineRadiation Oncology Consultants Ltd.Department of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterDepartment of Radiation Oncology, Northwestern University Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer CenterAbstract Background The internal mammary (IM) lymph node chain, along with the axillary nodal basin, is a first-echelon breast lymphatic draining site. A growing body of evidence supports irradiation of this region in node-positive breast cancer. This study evaluated the effectiveness of radiotherapy in treating magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-detected abnormal IM lymph nodes in newly-diagnosed non-metastatic breast cancer. Methods A structured query was performed on an electronic institutional database to identify women with radiographic evidence of abnormal IM node(s) on breast MRI from 2005 to 2013. Manual review narrowed inclusion to patients with a primary diagnosis of non-metastatic breast cancer with abnormal IM node(s) based on pathologic size criteria and/or abnormal enhancement. Results Of the 7070 women who underwent pre-treatment MRI, 19 (0.3%) were identified on imaging to have a total of 25 abnormal pre-treatment IM lymph nodes, of which 96% were located in the first two intercostal spaces and 4% in the third space. A majority of the primary tumors were high-grade (94.7%) and hormone-receptor negative (73.7%), while 47.4% overexpressed HER-2/neu receptor. Axillary nodal disease was present in 89.5% of patients, while one patient had supraclavicular involvement. At a median follow-up of 38 months, 31.6% of patients had developed metastatic disease and 21.1% had died from their disease. Of the patients who received IM coverage, none had progressive disease within the IM lymph node chain. Conclusions Radiologic evidence of pre-treatment abnormal IM chain lymph nodes was associated with advanced stage, high grade, and negative estrogen receptor status. The majority of positive lymph nodes were located within the first two intercostal spaces, while none were below the third. Radiation of the IM chain in combination with modern systemic therapy was effective in achieving locoregional control without surgical resection in this cohort of patients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0934-5BreastBreast neoplasmsLymph nodesMagnetic resonance imagingRadiotherapy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sean Sachdev
Chelain R. Goodman
Erin Neuschler
Kapila Kalakota
Daniel Cutright
Eric D. Donnelly
John P. Hayes
Adam E. Prescott
Gianna Mirabelli
Jonathan B. Strauss
spellingShingle Sean Sachdev
Chelain R. Goodman
Erin Neuschler
Kapila Kalakota
Daniel Cutright
Eric D. Donnelly
John P. Hayes
Adam E. Prescott
Gianna Mirabelli
Jonathan B. Strauss
Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
Radiation Oncology
Breast
Breast neoplasms
Lymph nodes
Magnetic resonance imaging
Radiotherapy
author_facet Sean Sachdev
Chelain R. Goodman
Erin Neuschler
Kapila Kalakota
Daniel Cutright
Eric D. Donnelly
John P. Hayes
Adam E. Prescott
Gianna Mirabelli
Jonathan B. Strauss
author_sort Sean Sachdev
title Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
title_short Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
title_full Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
title_fullStr Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Radiotherapy of MRI-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
title_sort radiotherapy of mri-detected involved internal mammary lymph nodes in breast cancer
publisher BMC
series Radiation Oncology
issn 1748-717X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Background The internal mammary (IM) lymph node chain, along with the axillary nodal basin, is a first-echelon breast lymphatic draining site. A growing body of evidence supports irradiation of this region in node-positive breast cancer. This study evaluated the effectiveness of radiotherapy in treating magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-detected abnormal IM lymph nodes in newly-diagnosed non-metastatic breast cancer. Methods A structured query was performed on an electronic institutional database to identify women with radiographic evidence of abnormal IM node(s) on breast MRI from 2005 to 2013. Manual review narrowed inclusion to patients with a primary diagnosis of non-metastatic breast cancer with abnormal IM node(s) based on pathologic size criteria and/or abnormal enhancement. Results Of the 7070 women who underwent pre-treatment MRI, 19 (0.3%) were identified on imaging to have a total of 25 abnormal pre-treatment IM lymph nodes, of which 96% were located in the first two intercostal spaces and 4% in the third space. A majority of the primary tumors were high-grade (94.7%) and hormone-receptor negative (73.7%), while 47.4% overexpressed HER-2/neu receptor. Axillary nodal disease was present in 89.5% of patients, while one patient had supraclavicular involvement. At a median follow-up of 38 months, 31.6% of patients had developed metastatic disease and 21.1% had died from their disease. Of the patients who received IM coverage, none had progressive disease within the IM lymph node chain. Conclusions Radiologic evidence of pre-treatment abnormal IM chain lymph nodes was associated with advanced stage, high grade, and negative estrogen receptor status. The majority of positive lymph nodes were located within the first two intercostal spaces, while none were below the third. Radiation of the IM chain in combination with modern systemic therapy was effective in achieving locoregional control without surgical resection in this cohort of patients.
topic Breast
Breast neoplasms
Lymph nodes
Magnetic resonance imaging
Radiotherapy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13014-017-0934-5
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