New Study Finds Mammosite To Be a Safe Breast
Cancer Treatment
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Treating breast cancer with MammoSite®
resulted in a low risk of complications and was generally well tolerated,
according to a University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine study presented at
the 47th annual meeting of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and
Oncology (ASTRO) in
MammoSite, a type of breast brachytherapy, uses a single catheter inserted into the breast following lumpectomy, or surgical removal of a tumor, to deliver a high dose of radiation. Once the catheter is inserted, a tiny balloon is inflated and loaded with radioactive seeds that deliver prescribed levels of radiation to targeted tissue surrounding the tumor site.
"MammoSite is a type of
partial breast irradiation that delivers radiation from the inside of the
breast directly to the tumor site where cancer cells are most likely to
reside," said Sushil Beriwal,
M.D., assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
and medical director of radiation oncology at
The study, which was designed to evaluate early outcomes of MammoSite brachytherapy, and was
approved by the FDA in 2002, evaluated toxicity in 100 patients treated between
June 2002 and October 2004 at the
Post-treatment complications included balloon rupture, infections, skin toxicity and seromas (persistence of the cavity where the lump was removed). Study results indicated that balloon rupture occurred in six patients (7 percent) and wound infections occurred in 10 patients (12 percent). No patients had serious skin toxicities from treatment. A palpable seroma was observed in 34 of the patients (40 percent) and persisted beyond six months of treatment in 22 patients (26 percent).
The study also evaluated cosmetic outcome of MammoSite treatment. Cosmetic outcome refers to the physical similarity between the treated breast and the untreated breast. Forty-eight patients (56 percent) had excellent cosmetic outcomes; 32 patients (37 percent) had good cosmetic outcomes; and seven patients (7 percent) had fair cosmetic outcomes.
"Our findings demonstrate that the toxicities associated
with MammoSite were similar to results reported in
the MammoSite brachytherapy
registry trial," said Beriwal. "The
complications were acceptable and the cosmetic outcome was comparable to what
we might see with standard external beam radiation." Beriwal
added that follow-up studies will seek to assess the long-term effects as well
as the efficacy of the treatment compared with standard external beam radiation
therapy and other types of breast brachytherapy.
SOURCES:
Annual Meeting of the American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology, Denver, CO
University of