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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06664892

Ultrahypofractionated Whole Breast Radiation Following Chemotherapy

Ultrahypofractionated Whole Breast Radiation Following Breast Conserving Surgery and Chemotherapy in Patients > 60 Years of Age With Clinically Low-Risk, Node-Negative Breast Cancer Who Have Received Prior Chemotherapy

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
213 (estimated)
Sponsor
MetroHealth Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
60 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a single institution, non-randomized, non-inferiority study comparing prospectively collected data for acute and late effects on the breast associated with ultrahypofractionated whole breast radiation (WBI) following breast conserving surgery (BCS) and chemotherapy to historical controls for breast cancer (BC) patients who receive hypofractionated RT following BCS and chemotherapy.

Detailed description

Standard treatment approaches for patients with localized BC includes BCS followed WBI \[1\], which has demonstrated equivalent local control and survival when compared to mastectomy \[2,3\]. Although conventionally fractionated radiotherapy (RT) (50 Gy 2 Gy per fraction) administered in 25 fractions in 5 weeks was historically used, moderate hypofractionation RT trials utilizing shorter treatment times and higher doses per session have resulted in favorable outcomes \[4,5,6\]. In addition, increased local control and reduced toxicity rates observed in moderate hypofractionation RT trials \[5,6\] have resulted in studies evaluating the use of ultrahypofractionated breast RT which further shorten the treatment time. The results of the FAST-Forward RT trial have shown that adjuvant RT using 26 Gy/5.2 Gy per fraction, over 5 fractions administered in 1 week, was not inferior to the standard 40.05 Gy/15 fx/3 weeks for local tumor control and is equally safe in terms of effects on normal tissue \[7\]. Side effects associated with RT can be more pronounced in patients when RT is combined with surgery and/or chemotherapy \[9\]. There are abundant data describing the safety of combining conventionally fractionated RT following chemotherapy. Similarly, there are several trials which have reported outcomes of patients who have received hypofractionated RT, including subsets of patients who also received chemotherapy demonstrating similar acute and late toxicity profiles compared to standard fractionation regimens \[10, 11, 12, 13\]. Although the FAST-Forward trial included patients who received neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy and estimates of 5-year cumulative incidence of any moderate or marked clinician-assessed normal tissue effects in the breast or chest wall were reported to be similar for 40 Gy 15 fraction hypofractionated vs the 26 Gy 5 fraction ultrahypofractionated RT regimen (26·8% v 28·5%, respectively), the study was not designed to detect differences for those who had received prior chemotherapy compared to those who did not \[7\]. Retrospective subgroup analysis did not identify differences in adverse effects related to prior chemotherapy, however confidence intervals overlapped, and the power for these retrospective subgroup analyses was low \[19\]. Hence, there is limited data evaluating the toxicity of ultrahypofractionated adjuvant breast RT in patients who have received prior chemotherapy. This study is designed to evaluate the acute and late effects on the breast of ultrahypofractionated WBI using the FAST-forward regimen (26 Gy, 5.2 Gy per fraction delivered in 1 week) in patients \> 60 years of age with pathologically or clinically node-negative early-stage BC who undergo BCS and chemotherapy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
RADIATIONUltra-hypofractionated radiationRT, delivered via external beam, 5.2 Gy per fraction for 5 fractions following BCS and neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. Specific adjuvant/neoadjuvant therapies are at the discretion of the treating Medical Oncologist.

Timeline

Start date
2025-04-01
Primary completion
2027-12-31
Completion
2029-12-31
First posted
2024-10-30
Last updated
2025-03-14

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06664892. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.