Abstract
Irradiation is indicated for patients undergoing mastectomy as surgical management for breast cancer treatment when clinical or pathologic tumor and nodal features predict risk of local/regional recurrence. Such features include: tumor size yy 5 cm, inadequate surgical margins; skin, facial, or skeletal muscle invasion; dermal lymphatic invasion; poorly differentiated tumor histology; four or more lymph nodes positive; gross extracapsular tumor nodal extension into soft tissues; and matted lymph nodes or enlarged lymph nodes > 2 cm. Patients who were treated with irradiation after mastectomy can develop local/regional recurrences despite such adjuvant therapy. General management for chest wall and nodal recurrences is structured on the extent and volume of local/ regional disease, the absence of distant metastases, the general health of the patient, and the extent of prior local/regional therapies, especially irradiation. Management of local/regional recurrence in the setting of no prior irradiation includes tumor debulking by systemic or surgical treatment followed by comprehensive chest wall and regional lymphatic irradiation. Doses are selected by tissue tolerances and volume of remaining disease. The management strategy for the patient with a history of irradiation parallels the nonirradiated patient with respect to systemic and surgical therapies to debulk the tumor to maximal response or no gross clinical disease. Radiation field design is determined by prior therapies. Doses to these fields are adjusted to normal tissue tolerance. Irradiation is given with a sensitizer such as hyperthermia or 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy. Use of radiation sensitizers can allow for a more meaningful biologic tumor effect when normal tissue tolerances prohibit delivery of standard tumor doses. Hyperthermia has been used effectively to promote complete tumor responses with use of irradiation in re-treatment cases.