Multimodal treatment of locoregionally advanced breast cancer

1983 
Fifty-two patients with locally advanced primary breast cancer (T3, T4/N2, N3) without distant metastases were treated with three cycles of combination chemotherapy consisting of 5-FU, Adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (FAC) and immunotherapy with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) followed by local therapy (simple mastectomy and/or radiotherapy to breast/chest wall and regional lymphatics) and adjuvant chemotherapy to complete two years of treatment. Forty-nine of 52 (94%) patients were rendered free of clinically detectable disease. The median disease-free interval was 24 months. At a median follow-up time of 60 months, 40% of patients remained free of disease, off all therapy. Those patients who completed two years of therapy and started adjuvant chemotherapy promptly after local treatment had a 48% disease-free survival at five years. Local recurrences were observed in 21% of patients. Distant metastases developed in 40% of patients. Despite good tolerance, treatment compliance was poor. The complete remission rate with this multimodal approach is high and long-term disease-free survival is achieved in a considerable number of patients.
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