A Multi-Institutional Registry for CyberKnife Stereotactic Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (CK-SAPBI)

Purpose

This study is a registry to monitor quality of life and clinical outcomes in patients with clinically localized breast cancer who have received stereotactic accelerated partial breast irradiation via CyberKnife.

Condition

  • Breast Cancer

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 50 Years and 99 Years
Eligible Genders
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Subjects are eligible to participate in the registry if they receive CK-SAPBI in 5 fractions within 12 weeks of surgery and sign an institution specific consent form. Additionally, subjects will be considered standard risk and optimal for CK-SAPBI if they meet the following criteria: - Newly diagnosed AJCC (seventh edition) Stage 0 or I breast cancer. - On histological examination, the tumor must be DCIS or invasive non-lobular carcinoma of the breast - Surgical treatment of the breast must have been wide excision, lumpectomy or partial mastectomy - Age 50 years or greater - ER positive - PR positive - Her2 negative (IHC 0-1+; for IHC 2+, FISH must be non-amplified) - Subjects with invasive tumors should undergo axillary sentinel lymph node evaluation or axillary lymph node dissection. - Negative inked surgical margins of excision or re-excision, clear of invasive tumor and DCIS by at least 2 mm - Negative post-excision or post-reexcision mammography if cancer presented with malignancy-associated microcalcifications with no remaining suspicious calcifications in the breast before radiotherapy. Alternatively, a specimen radiograph can be obtained showing all the suspicious calcifications. - No involved axillary lymph nodes, N0(i+) allowed - Target lumpectomy cavity/whole breast reference volume must be <30% based on treatment planning CT

Exclusion Criteria

  • -Patients with invasive lobular carcinoma or nonepithelial breast malignancies such as sarcoma or lymphoma. - Patients with tumors greater than 2 cm - Patients with surgical margins which cannot be microscopically assessed or not cleared by at least 2mm at pathological evaluation. - Patients with multicentric carcinoma or with other clinically or radiographically suspicious areas in the ipsilateral breast unless confirmed to be negative for malignancy by biopsy. Breast MRI will be required to exclude multicentric disease and additional suspicious areas will require biopsy to exclude malignancy. - Patients with involved axillary nodes. - Patients with collagen vascular diseases (active). - Patient with known deleterious BRCA1/2 mutations or known mutations in other high penetrance genes (TP53, STK11, PTEN, CDH1) - Patients with prior ipsilateral breast irradiation. - Patients with prior ipsilateral thoracic irradiation. - Patients with Paget's disease of the nipple. - Patients with diffuse suspicious microcalcifications. - Patients with suspicious microcalcifications remaining on the post-excision mammogram. - Patients receiving (neo)adjuvant systemic therapy other than hormonal therapy - Patients with oncoplastic reconstruction and absence of surgical clips

Study Design

Phase
Study Type
Observational [Patient Registry]
Observational Model
Other
Time Perspective
Other

Recruiting Locations

Georgetown University Hospital
Washington, District of Columbia 20008
Contact:
Olusola OBAYOMI-DAVIES, M.D
202-444-3320
olusola.obayomi-davies@medstar.net

More Details

Status
Unknown status
Sponsor
Georgetown University

Study Contact

Olusola Obayomi-Davies, M.D.
6104465860
olusola.obayomi-davies@crozer.org

Detailed Description

Radiotherapy for breast cancer is delivered using several whole breast and partial breast approaches. The optimal approach is unknown. The utilization of partial breast irradiation is growing due to the convenience of fewer fractions versus fifteen- thirty treatments required with conventional or hypofractionated whole breast radiation therapy. Early results with partial breast techniques are promising, showing similar cancer control and toxicity. There is a large body of mature Phase I/II and preliminary Phase III data available exploring the replacement of WBI with an accelerated course of radiation therapy restricted to the region around the tumor bed (accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation, aPBI) using a variety of techniques. For appropriately selected patients treated with modern techniques, the results are encouraging and the techniques have been shown to be safe, tolerable, and highly reproducible with outcomes similar to WBI. Currently, there is limited data assessing the quality of life, cosmetic and oncologic outcomes following stereotactic partial breast irradiation in a large patient population. Our study will be the first essential step in aggregating the outcomes of patients undergoing this type of external beam irradiation in a large patient population.