Treatment of hepatic metastases of breast cancer with CT-guided interstitial brachytherapy - a phase II-study.

Journal: Radiotherapy And Oncology : Journal Of The European Society For Therapeutic Radiology And Oncology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: The aim of the study was the evaluation of feasibility, safety and effectiveness of interstitial brachytherapy for the treatment of hepatic metastases of breast cancer.

Methods: Forty-one consecutive patients with 115 unresectable hepatic metastases of breast cancer were included in this phase-II-trial. They were treated in 69 interventions of CT-guided-interstitial-brachytherapy of the liver. Brachytherapy was applied as a single fraction high-dose-irradiation (15-25Gy (Gray)) using a (192)Ir-source of 10Ci. Nineteen patients presented systemically pretreated extrahepatic tumors. Primary endpoints were complications, local tumor control and progression-free survival.

Results: The median tumor diameter was 4.6 cm (1.5-11 cm). The median irradiation time per intervention was 26.5 min (range: 7-47 min). The applied median minimal dose at the CTV (clinical target volume) margin was 18.5 Gy (12-25 Gy). In 69 interventions and during the postinterventional period, one major complication (symptomatic post-interventional bleeding) (1.5%) and six minor complications occurred (8.7%). The median follow-up time was 18 months (range: 1-56). After 6, 12 and 18 months, local tumor control was 97%, 93.5% and 93.5%, intra- and extrahepatic progression free survival was 53%, 40% and 27%, and overall survival was 97%, 79% and 60%, respectively.

Conclusions: CT-guided-brachytherapy is safe and effective for the treatment of liver metastases of breast cancer.

Authors
Gero Wieners, Konrad Mohnike, Nils Peters, Joachim Bischoff, Anke Kleine Tebbe, Ricarda Seidensticker, Max Seidensticker, Günther Gademann, Peter Wust, Maciej Pech, Jens Ricke
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer, Liver Cancer