Treatment of Early Breast Cancer Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC.

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Treatment of Early Breast Cancer Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC

Transcript of Treatment of Early Breast Cancer Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC.

Page 1: Treatment of Early Breast Cancer Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC.

Treatment of Early Breast Cancer

Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC

Page 2: Treatment of Early Breast Cancer Frances Wright MD MEd FRCSC.

Objectives

• imaging & diagnosis

• historical overview of surgical treatment

• current practice– breast surgery– axillary staging

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Radiologic Work-up

• Common– Mammogram– Ultrasound

• Good for young women• Usually targeted

• Uncommon– Galactogram– MRI

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Mammogram

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Some cancers are not found until they reach this size

         

A mammogram can find cancer when it is only this size   

www.obsp.on.ca

Benefits of Mammogram

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Survival and Stage of Breast Cancer

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Mammogram X-ray of the Breast

• No screening tool 100% effective

• 85-90% of all breast cancers in women > 50 can be identified on mammogram

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Mammograms and Cancer

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Ultrasound of Breast Cancer

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Magnetic Resonance Imaging

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MRI

• Advantage– Not affected by breast

density– Can identify occult

disease

• Disadvantage– Dependent on who does

the imaging– Sensitive, not very

specific– Need MRI biopsy

capability

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Breast MRI – Screening…

• Who should get ?– Screening - evidence

• BRCA mutation carriers• Untested 1st degree relatives of carriers• Family history of hereditary cancer syndrome;

risk > 25%

– Screening – no good evidence • Prior chest radiation before age 30 (Hodgkins)• Some women with LCIS/atypia

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MRI for Surgeons

• Treatment Planning – 3% of contralateral breast cancers are occult to

physical exam/ mammo (Lehman 2007)– Occult primary with axillary mets– Paget’s disease of the nipple– Invasive lobular carcinoma – Extent of disease work up– Evaluation of residual disease

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Breast Imaging Reporting & Data Systems = BIRADSInterpretation Risk Ca

0 Incomplete assessment

1 Negative 0.05%

2 Benign 0.05%

3 Probably benign 2%

4 Suspicious 15 - 50%

5 Highly suspicious 95 - 99%

6 Known cancer 100%

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Imaging

• BIRADs classification

1

2

3 5

4

Needs biopsyNo action

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The work-up: Pathology

• Core needle biopsy– Gives more information – – type of cells – invasive vs. non-invasive

• Fine needle biopsy – not done as much now– Malignant vs. not malignant– Rule out cyst

• Excisional biopsy - uncommon now

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Ductal carcinoma in situ

Invasive ductal carcinoma

Pathology: Ductal Carcinoma in situ and Invasive ductal Carcinoma

No lymph node involvement

Potential lymph node involvement

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• There must be clinical, radiologic and pathologic agreement (concordance) in diagnosis

• If one doesn’t fit – consider surgical excisional biopsy

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The evolution of breast surgery

• Halsted 1852 - 1922 • tumour begins small• systematic progression

to surrounding tissues

• involvement of lymphatics leads to distant spread

• local control = cure

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The evolution of breast surgery

• Halstedian principles• radical mastectomy

– Breast, pectoralis major and minor and axillary tissue

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The evolution of breast surgery

• Bernard Fisher • breast cancer systemic

at onset• surgery impact is local• lumpectomy + RT =

mastectomy

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The evolution of breast surgery

• “Fisherian” theory• breast conservation

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The evolution of breast surgery

Halstedian principles

radical mastectomy

versus

“Fisherian” theory

breast conservation

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Breast conservation

• removal of tumour with a margin of normal tissue • post-operative radiation to reduce local recurrence

rates• suitable for clinical stage I-II tumours (< 5cm, mobile)• acceptable cosmetic outcome• equivalent survival to mastectomy

• higher local recurrence rate 7-8% vs. 5%

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Mastectomy

• large or multicentric tumours• unacceptable cosmesis, small breast : tumour ratio• persistent positive margins with conserving surgery• contraindication to radiation• patient preference

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Surgical Treatment of Early Breast Cancer

Breast

Breast conservation

or

Mastectomy

Axilla

Sentinel Node Biopsy possible axillary dissection

or

Level I/II axillary dissection

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Axillary Surgery

• axillary status most significant prognostic indicator• role in determining need for adjuvant therapy• provides local control if nodes involved with tumour• controversial survival benefit

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Axillary Lymph Node Dissection

• associated morbidities– decrease range of motion, sensory defects, pain– nerve injury– lymphedema of ipsilateral arm (10-15%)

• majority of women node negative• no benefit from removal of negative nodes

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Likelihood of having lymph node involvement

Diameter of primary tumour

Percent with positive axillary nodes

0.5 - 0.9 cm 21 %

1.0 - 1.9 cm 33 %

2.0 – 2.9 cm 45 %

3.0 – 3.9 cm 55 %

4.0 – 4.9 cm 60 %

> 5.0cm 70 %

Carter 1989

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The sentinel node for breast cancer

• Cabanas 1977 - penile cancer and inguinal nodes

• Morton 1992 - melanoma

• Krag 1994 - isotope in breast cancer

• Guiliano - blue dye in breast cancer

• Albertini - blue dye and isotope

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Sentinel node concept

• first node or nodes in the draining nodal basin most likely to harbour metastases

• status of the sentinel node reflects the status of the entire nodal basin

• if found to be negative, no further axillary nodes removed

• enables staging with less morbidity

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tumour

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Radioisotope +/-Blue Dye

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radioactivity

blue dye

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Pathological evaluation

• usual evaluation is bi-valve of 10 - 20 nodes • retrieval of fewer nodes (1-3) allows more extensive

evaluation– H & E multiple sections – immunohistochemical staining (IHC)

– No accepted standard

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Sentinel node biopsy for who?

• small invasive T1 - T2 tumours • clinically node negative• contraindicated in

– locally advanced or inflammatory • Not as accurate

– prior lumpectomy– prior ALND

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Sentinel node biopsy by whom?

• specialized multidisciplinary technique involving surgeon, nuclear medicine and

pathology• surgeons should be familiar with risks/benefits and

perform breast surgery routinely• recommended surgeons have performed at least 20

cases with “back up” axillary dissection first• should have a localization rate > 90%• should have false negative rate < 5%

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Sentinel Node Biopsy - evidence?

• multi-institutional validation study using radioisotope1

• single institution series using blue dye 2

• over 60 other observational series reporting similar results

• one randomized control trial to date with 46 mo f/u demonstrating no difference in adverse events & less morbidity 3

1Krag et al. NEJM 1998; 339(14):941 - 9462Guiliano et al. Ann Surg 1994; 220:391- 4013Veronesi et al. NEJM 2003; 349(6):546 - 53

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Sentinel Node Biopsy - evidence?

• two large multicentre trials recently completed accrual– NSABP 32 & ACOSOG Z0010

– ACOSOG Z0011 accruing (SLN node positive)

• objectives:– determine local recurrence and survival in women

undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy only – determine morbidity associated with sentinel

lymph node biopsy

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Breast Cancer Treatment in the 20th Century:Quest for the Ideal Local-regional Therapy

1900 2000

Radical Mastectomy

Extended Radical Mastectomy

Modified Radical Mastectomy

Lumpectomy

BC + RT

Ax LND

BCT + RT

Sentinel Node BiopsyI D E A L T H E R A P Y

1950 Radiation

Overtreatment

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Summary

• Evolution of breast cancer surgery for more to less

• More and more specialized

• Less morbidity for patient