Late Hepatic Toxicities after Breast Cancer Irradiation with Helicoidal Tomotherapy
PO-1233
Abstract
Late Hepatic Toxicities after Breast Cancer Irradiation with Helicoidal Tomotherapy
1Curie Paris, Radiothérapie, Paris, France
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Purpose or Objective
Helical tomotherapy (HT) is a rotational
intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) technique, which allows conformal
target irradiation and efficient cardiac sparing in case of complex target
volumes
and of specific anatomic considerations. However, HT
increases low-dose bath to non-target volumes (such as the lungs, the
contralateral breast or the liver), which late consequences are still poorly
known. The aim of this study was to analyze late hepatic toxicities after
irradiation of non-metastatic breast cancer with HT.
Material and Methods
This single center retrospective study included
all non-metastatic breast cancer patients treated with tomotherapy between 01/10
and 01/21 at the IC (Paris, France), with a biological hepatic
function considered as normal before irradiation and re-assessed after more
than 1 year without metastatic disease at this reevaluation time point, and for
whom the dosimetric parameters to the whole liver were assessable. Biological
hepatic function evaluation included γGT, ALT, AST, total bilirubin and
LDH. Mean and maximum dose to the liver were retrieved from DVH.
A logistic regression analysis was carried out with
cancer laterality, obesity, chemotherapy, hormonotherapy, trastuzumab, mean and
maximum dose as explanatory variables for late biological hepatic toxicity perturbation.
The selected covariates for the multivariate analysis were those with a p-value
less or equal to 0.20 in the univariate analysis. Significance level was 0.05.
Results
Forty-nine patients were included in this study;
15 patients (31%) received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, 28 patients (57%) adjuvant
chemotherapy, 11 patients (22%) Trastuzumab for 1 year for HER2-expression
tumors, and 38 patients (78%) hormonotherapy; 27 patients (55%) were irradiated
for a right breast cancer; 43 patients (88%) received lymph node irradiation
and 41 patients (84%) a tumor bed boost. Median total prescription dose was
63.8 Gy [40-66]. Median mean and maximum dose to the liver were 2.8 Gy
[0.3-16.6] and 26.9 Gy [0.7-51.7], respectively.
At a median follow-up of 56 months, 11 patients
(22%) developed low grade late biological hepatic perturbation: all patients
had late grade 1 hepatic toxicities predominating on γGT (5 patients)
and ALT (3 patients); 3 patients (6%) had additional late grade 2 hepatic
toxicities (γGT, ALT and total bilirubin
increase). There was no grade ≥3 toxicity.
Univariate and multivariate analysis, Trastuzumab
was a significant predictor variable of late biological hepatic toxicity (OR=4.4
[1.01-20.18], p=0.04). No other variable was significant.
Conclusion
Late hepatic toxicity was negligible after multimodal
management of non-metastatic breast cancer including tomotherapy irradiation
and was not influenced by irradiation side or radiation doses delivered to the
liver, which were usually low. Consequently, liver may not be a relevant
organ-at-risk when planning breast cancer tomotherapy.