Overview on cardiac, pulmonary and cutaneous toxicity in patients treated with adjuvant radiotherapy for breast cancer.
Icro MeattiniMarina GuenziAlessandra FozzaCristiana VidaliPaolo RoveaFiammetta MeacciLorenzo LiviPublished in: Breast cancer (Tokyo, Japan) (2016)
Conservative management of breast cancer represents the standard treatment for early disease. Breast conserving surgery associated with radiotherapy for stage I-II has been proven to be as equally effective as mastectomy in term of local control, distant disease, and overall survival. The growing minimal invasive surgical approach on the axillary region, and the new breast reconstructive techniques, will probably lead to a significant decrease of the rate of side-effects related to mastectomy. Therefore, the adverse events caused by adjuvant radiation still remain a challenge. Cutaneous, pulmonary and cardiac toxicity represent the main toxicities of adjuvant radiotherapy for breast cancer. Safety profile of radiation is strongly dependent on the multidisciplinary management of the single case (systemic treatment, endocrine therapy, surgery), individual characteristics (i.e., co-morbidities, age, habits), and radiation-related aspects. Radiation techniques development, and facilities implementation concerning organs-at-risk sparing systems (i.e., image-guided radiotherapy, tracking systems, respiratory gating), represent brand new tools for the clinical oncologist, that would certainly minimize toxicity profile in the next future. However, data reported from published literature will greatly help physicians, to give to the patients appropriate counseling regarding the efficacy and potential adverse events of treatments, thus optimizing the informed decision-making process.
Keyphrases
- early stage
- radiation induced
- locally advanced
- radiation therapy
- minimally invasive
- sentinel lymph node
- primary care
- oxidative stress
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- decision making
- pulmonary hypertension
- coronary artery bypass
- ejection fraction
- systematic review
- left ventricular
- machine learning
- newly diagnosed
- preterm infants
- randomized controlled trial
- prognostic factors
- risk assessment
- stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- big data
- coronary artery disease
- surgical site infection
- young adults
- human health
- mesenchymal stem cells
- hiv infected
- breast reconstruction