CHAN, Tabitha Y, TANG, Johann I, TAN, Poh Wee and ROBERTS, Neill (2018). Dosimetric evaluation and systematic review of radiation therapy techniques for early stage node-negative breast cancer treatment. Cancer Management and Research, 2018 (10), 4853-4870. [Article]
Documents
23067:517163
PDF
cmar-172818-dosimetric-evaluation-and-systematic-review-of-breast-radiat-101918.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.
cmar-172818-dosimetric-evaluation-and-systematic-review-of-breast-radiat-101918.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.
Download (269kB) | Preview
Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) is essential in treating women with early stage breast cancer.
Early stage node-negative breast cancer (ESNNBC) offers a good prognosis; hence, late
effects of breast RT becomes increasingly important. Recent literature suggests a potential for
an increase in cardiac and pulmonary events after RT. However, these studies have not taken
into account the impact of newer and current RT techniques that are now available. Hence, this
review aimed to evaluate the clinical evidence for each technique and determine the optimal
radiation technique for ESNNBC treatment. Currently, six RT techniques are consistently used
and studied: 1) prone positioning, 2) proton beam RT, 3) intensity-modulated RT, 4) breathhold,
5) partial breast irradiation, and 6) intraoperative RT. These techniques show dosimetric
promise. However, limited data on late cardiac and pulmonary events exist due to challenges
in long-term follow-up. Moving forward, future studies are needed to validate the efficacy and
clinical outcomes of these current techniques.
More Information
Statistics
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |