Inadequacy of iridium implant as sole radiation treatment for operable breast cancer

1996 
Abstract In order to avoid a prolonged course of external irradiation as part of breast conservation therapy, 27 patients received an iridium implant to the primary tumour bed as sole radiation treatment. Surgery was standardised comprising tumourectomy and axillary clearance. Using a rigid implant afterloading with iridium 192 wires, 55 Gy was delivered on a continuous basis over 5 days. After 6 years median follow-up, relapse of cancer within the treated breast has occurred in 10 of the 27 patients (37%). Compared with historical controls treated by similar surgery and iridium 192 implant (20 Gy) with external radiotherapy (46 Gy), there was a significantly increased breast relapse rate in those treated by iridium implant alone. However, the incidence of distant metastases and overall survival was similar. Thus, a continuous iridium 192 implant delivering 55 Gy in 5 days is not an effective means of achieving local control in patients with operable breast cancer.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    9
    References
    172
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []