Avoiding Regional Nodal Irradiation after Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Some Breast Cancer Patients

SUMMARY: Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the US and about 1 in 8 women (12%) will develop invasive breast cancer during their lifetime. It is estimated that in the US, approximately 310,720 new cases of female breast cancer will be diagnosed in 2024, and about 42,250 individuals will die of the disease, largely due to metastatic recurrence.

Neoadjuvant or preoperative therapy is often a component of combined-modality treatment, and facilitates the rapid assessment of new cancer therapies. In addition to increasing the likelihood of tumor resectability and breast preservation, patients achieving a pathological Complete Response (pCR) following neoadjuvant chemotherapy have a longer Event Free Survival (EFS) and Overall Survival (OS).

When patients with early stage breast cancer present with pathologically positive axillary nodes, neoadjuvant chemotherapy is often recommended to eradicate cancer cells. These patients are often treated with adjuvant regional nodal irradiation including the chest wall after mastectomy and with whole breast irradiation after breast conserving surgery.

However, there is no established protocol for treatment when chemotherapy converts node-positive disease to node-negative disease. There is an ongoing debate whether these individuals should be treated as lymph node-positive disease (as it was at the time of diagnosis) and treated with radiation treatment, or as node-negative disease (presentation after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and following surgery). Radiation Therapy can be associated with fatigue, radiation dermatitis, lymphedema, and can have an impact on breast reconstruction. The following study was conducted to evaluate whether radiation treatment can be safely omitted in this patient population

The NRG Oncology/NSABP B-51/RTOG 1304 was conducted to evaluate the impact of Regional Nodal Irradiation (RNI) on patient outcomes following neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In this Phase III clinical trial, 1,641 enrolled patients had clinical cT1-3, N1, M0 invasive breast cancer (biopsy-proven node positive by FNA/core needle bx), and had completed 8 weeks or more of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and anti-HER2 therapy if HER2-positive), and were ypN0 after mastectomy or breast conserving surgery and sentinel node biopsy (2 or more nodes), axillary lymph node dissection, or both. These patients were then randomly assigned 1:1 to either the “no RNI” group (observation after mastectomy, or whole breast irradiation after breast-conserving surgery) or the “RNI” group (chest wall irradiation plus RNI after mastectomy, or whole breast irradiation plus RNI after breast-conserving surgery). Both treatment groups were well balanced. The median age was 52 years, majority of the patients (60%) were cT2, 23% were triple-negative, 21% HR+/HER2-negative, 56% were HER2-positive and 78% had breast pathologic Complete Response. The Primary endpoint was Invasive Breast Cancer Recurrence-Free Interval (IBC-RFI). Secondary endpoints reported here included Loco-Regional Recurrence-Free interval (LRRFI), Distant Recurrence-Free Interval (DRFI), Disease-Free Survival (DFS), and Overall Survival (OS). The median follow up was 59.5 months and 1,556 patients were available for primary event analysis.

In the evaluable patients (N=1556), similar outcomes were noted whether the patients received adjuvant Regional Nodal Irradiation (RNI) or not. Approximately 92% of patients in the “no RNI” group and 92.7% of those in the “RNI” group were free of Invasive Breast Cancer Recurrences five years after surgery. Distant Recurrence and Overall Survival rates were also similar between the treatment groups, with 93.4% of patients in each treatment group free from Distant Recurrence five years after surgery, and 94% of those in the “no RNI” group and 93.6% of those in the “RNI” group alive after five years. There were no study-related deaths and no unexpected toxicities.

It was concluded from this study that certain breast cancer patients who respond well to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and achieve negative lymph nodes after surgery may safely omit adjuvant lymph node radiation without compromising outcomes. If confirmed by further research and endorsed by medical guidelines, these findings could spare many breast cancer patients from unnecessary radiation therapy, thereby reducing treatment-related side effects and improving quality of life. This study underscores the importance of individualized treatment approaches in oncology, highlighting the need to reassess treatment strategies based on evolving evidence.

Loco-regional irradiation in patients with biopsy-proven axillary node involvement at presentation who become pathologically node-negative after neoadjuvant chemotherapy: Mamounas E, Bandos H, White J, et al: Primary outcomes of NRG Oncology/NSABP B-51/RTOG 1304. 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Abstract GS02-07. Presented December 7, 2023.