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Does breast composition influence late adverse effects in breast radiotherapy?

Does breast composition influence late adverse effects in breast radiotherapy?
Does breast composition influence late adverse effects in breast radiotherapy?
Background: Large breast size is associated with increased risk of late adverse effects after surgery and radiotherapy for early breast cancer. It is hypothesised that effects of radiotherapy on adipose tissue are responsible for some of the effects seen. In this study, the association of breast composition with late effects was investigated along with other breast features such as fibroglandular tissue distribution, seroma and scar.

Methods: The patient dataset comprised of 18 cases with changes in breast appearance at 2 years follow-up post-radiotherapy and 36 controls with no changes, from patients entered into the FAST-Pilot and UK FAST trials at The Royal Marsden. Breast composition, fibroglandular tissue distribution, seroma and scar were assessed on planning CT scan images and compared using univariate analysis. The association of all features with late-adverse effect was tested using logistic regression (adjusting for confounding factors) and matched analysis was performed using conditional logistic regression.

Results: In univariate analyses, no statistically significant differences were found between cases and controls in terms of breast features studied. A statistically significant association (p < 0.05) between amount of seroma and change in photographic breast appearance was found in unmatched and matched logistic regression analyses with odds ratio (95% CI) of 3.44 (1.28–9.21) and 2.57 (1.05–6.25), respectively.

Conclusions: A significant association was found between seroma and late-adverse effects after radiotherapy although no significant associations were noted with breast composition in this study. Therefore, the cause for large breast size as a risk factor for late effects after surgery and optimally planned radiotherapy remains unresolved.
breast radiotherapy, toxicity, breast segmentation, seroma
0960-9776
25-30
Juneja, Prabhjot
6a628b26-d2cc-498c-a402-fa5308e1968a
Bonora, Maria
b6a9e824-deff-40cd-97b9-7c9dccb3bde2
Haviland, Joanne S.
569aa43b-15bd-4e9d-b4a5-e68a84334cfe
Harris, Emma
13d37370-a88e-4b66-bb8f-bf5eb16ebbac
Evans, Phil
8e585035-14fe-4922-9381-8e06bb17b0bd
Somaiah, Navita
1763ae76-90e2-451c-8bed-ce5d9725995e
Juneja, Prabhjot
6a628b26-d2cc-498c-a402-fa5308e1968a
Bonora, Maria
b6a9e824-deff-40cd-97b9-7c9dccb3bde2
Haviland, Joanne S.
569aa43b-15bd-4e9d-b4a5-e68a84334cfe
Harris, Emma
13d37370-a88e-4b66-bb8f-bf5eb16ebbac
Evans, Phil
8e585035-14fe-4922-9381-8e06bb17b0bd
Somaiah, Navita
1763ae76-90e2-451c-8bed-ce5d9725995e

Juneja, Prabhjot, Bonora, Maria, Haviland, Joanne S., Harris, Emma, Evans, Phil and Somaiah, Navita (2016) Does breast composition influence late adverse effects in breast radiotherapy? The Breast, 26, 25-30. (doi:10.1016/j.breast.2015.12.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Large breast size is associated with increased risk of late adverse effects after surgery and radiotherapy for early breast cancer. It is hypothesised that effects of radiotherapy on adipose tissue are responsible for some of the effects seen. In this study, the association of breast composition with late effects was investigated along with other breast features such as fibroglandular tissue distribution, seroma and scar.

Methods: The patient dataset comprised of 18 cases with changes in breast appearance at 2 years follow-up post-radiotherapy and 36 controls with no changes, from patients entered into the FAST-Pilot and UK FAST trials at The Royal Marsden. Breast composition, fibroglandular tissue distribution, seroma and scar were assessed on planning CT scan images and compared using univariate analysis. The association of all features with late-adverse effect was tested using logistic regression (adjusting for confounding factors) and matched analysis was performed using conditional logistic regression.

Results: In univariate analyses, no statistically significant differences were found between cases and controls in terms of breast features studied. A statistically significant association (p < 0.05) between amount of seroma and change in photographic breast appearance was found in unmatched and matched logistic regression analyses with odds ratio (95% CI) of 3.44 (1.28–9.21) and 2.57 (1.05–6.25), respectively.

Conclusions: A significant association was found between seroma and late-adverse effects after radiotherapy although no significant associations were noted with breast composition in this study. Therefore, the cause for large breast size as a risk factor for late effects after surgery and optimally planned radiotherapy remains unresolved.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 December 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 January 2016
Published date: April 2016
Keywords: breast radiotherapy, toxicity, breast segmentation, seroma
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 387172
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/387172
ISSN: 0960-9776
PURE UUID: 9353c8f9-2030-4f8d-9113-596eaee38d94

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2016 14:10
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:44

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Contributors

Author: Prabhjot Juneja
Author: Maria Bonora
Author: Joanne S. Haviland
Author: Emma Harris
Author: Phil Evans
Author: Navita Somaiah

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