74 research outputs found

    MRI-Based Radiomics Analysis for the Pretreatment Prediction of Pathologic Complete Tumor Response to Neoadjuvant Systemic Therapy in Breast Cancer Patients: A Multicenter Study

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    Simple SummaryThe prediction of pathologic complete response (pCR) to neo-adjuvant systemic therapy (NST) based on radiological assessment of pretreatment MRI exams in breast cancer patients is not possible to date. In this study, we investigated the value of pretreatment MRI-based radiomics analysis for the prediction of pCR to NST. Radiomics, clinical, and combined models were developed and validated based on MRI exams containing 320 tumors collected from two hospitals. The clinical models significantly outperformed the radiomics models for the prediction of pCR to NST and were of similar or better performance than the combined models. This indicates poor performance of the radiomics features and that in these scenarios the radiomic features did not have an added value for the clinical models developed. Due to previous and current work, we tentatively attribute the lack of significant improvement in clinical models following the addition of radiomics features to the effects of variations in acquisition and reconstruction parameters. The lack of reproducibility data meant this effect could not be analyzed. These results indicate the need for reproducibility studies to preselect reproducible features in order to properly assess the potential of radiomics.This retrospective study investigated the value of pretreatment contrast-enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)-based radiomics for the prediction of pathologic complete tumor response to neoadjuvant systemic therapy in breast cancer patients. A total of 292 breast cancer patients, with 320 tumors, who were treated with neo-adjuvant systemic therapy and underwent a pretreatment MRI exam were enrolled. As the data were collected in two different hospitals with five different MRI scanners and varying acquisition protocols, three different strategies to split training and validation datasets were used. Radiomics, clinical, and combined models were developed using random forest classifiers in each strategy. The analysis of radiomics features had no added value in predicting pathologic complete tumor response to neoadjuvant systemic therapy in breast cancer patients compared with the clinical models, nor did the combined models perform significantly better than the clinical models. Further, the radiomics features selected for the models and their performance differed with and within the different strategies. Due to previous and current work, we tentatively attribute the lack of improvement in clinical models following the addition of radiomics to the effects of variations in acquisition and reconstruction parameters. The lack of reproducibility data (i.e., test-retest or similar) meant that this effect could not be analyzed. These results indicate the need for reproducibility studies to preselect reproducible features in order to properly assess the potential of radiomics

    Diagnostic Accuracy of Different Surgical Procedures for Axillary Staging After Neoadjuvant Systemic Therapy in Node-positive Breast Cancer

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    Objective: The aim of this study was to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the accuracy of different surgical axillary staging procedures compared with ALND. Summary of Background Data: Optimal axillary staging after neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) in node-positive breast cancer is an area of controversy. Several less invasive procedures, such as sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB), marking axillary lymph node with radioactive iodine seed (MARI), and targeted axillary dissection (a combination of SLNB and a MARI-like procedure), have been proposed to replace the conventional axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) with its concomitant morbidity. Methods: PubMed and Embase were searched for studies comparing less invasive surgical axillary staging procedures to ALND to identify axillary burden after NSTin patients with pathologically confirmed node-positive breast cancer (cNþ). A meta-analysis was performed to compare identification rate (IFR), false-negative rate (FNR), and negative predictive value (NPV). Results: Of 1132 records, 20 unique studies with 2217 patients were included in quantitative analysis: 17 studies on SLNB, 1 study on MARI, and 2 studies on a combination procedure. Overall axillary pathologic complete response rate was 37%. For SLNB, pooled rates of IFR and FNR were 89% and 17%. NPV ranged from 57% to 86%. For MARI, IFR was 97%, FNR 7%, and NPV 83%. For the combination procedure, IFR was 100%, FNR ranged from 2% to 4%, and NPV from 92% to 97%. Conclusion: Axillary staging by a combination procedure consisting of SLNB with excision of a pre-NST marked positive lymph node appears to be most accurate for axillary staging after NST. More evidence from prospective multicenter trials is needed to confirm this

    Correlation between Pathologic Complete Response in the Breast and Absence of Axillary Lymph Node Metastases after Neoadjuvant Systemic Therapy

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    Objective:The aim was to investigate whether pathologic complete response (PCR) in the breast is correlated with absence of axillary lymph node metastases at final pathology (ypN0) in patients treated with neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) for different breast cancer subtypes.Background:Pathologic complete response rates have improved on account of more effective systemic treatment regimens. Promising results in feasibility trials with percutaneous image-guided tissue sampling for the identification of breast PCR after NST raise the question whether breast surgery is a redundant procedure. Thereby, the need for axillary surgery should be reconsidered as well.Methods:Patients diagnosed with cT1-3N0-1 breast cancer and treated with NST, followed by surgery between 2010 and 2016, were selected from the Netherlands Cancer Registry. Patients were compared according to the pa

    Excision of both pretreatment marked positive nodes and sentinel nodes improves axillary staging after neoadjuvant systemic therapy in breast cancer

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    Background: Marking the axilla with radioactive iodine seed and sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy have been proposed for axillary staging after neoadjuvant systemic therapy in clinically node-positive breast cancer. This study evaluated the identification rate and detection of residual disease with combined excision of pretreatment-positive marked lymph nodes (MLNs) together with SLNs. Methods: This was a multicentre retrospective analysis of patients with clinically node-positive breast cancer undergoing neoadjuvant systemic therapy and the combination procedure (with or without axillary lymph node dissection). The identification rate and detection of axillary residual disease were calculated for the combination procedure, and for MLNs and SLNs separately. Results: At least one MLN and/or SLN(s) were identified by the combination procedure in 138 of 139 patients (identification rate 99·3 per cent). The identification rate was 92·8 per cent for MLNs alone and 87·8 per cent for SLNs alone. In 88 of 139 patients (63·3 per cent) residual axillary disease was detected by the combination procedure. Residual disease was shown only in the MLN in 20 of 88 patients (23 per cent) and only in the SLN in ten of 88 (11 per cent), whereas both the MLN and SLN contained residual disease in the remainder (58 of 88, 66 per cent). Conclusion: Excision of the pretreatment-positive MLN together with SLNs after neoadjuvant systemic therapy in patients with clinically node-positive disease resulted in a higher identification rate and improved detection of residual axillary disease

    Screening for distant metastases in patients with ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence: the impact of different imaging modalities on distant recurrence-free interval

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    Purpose In patients with ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence (IBTR), the detection of distant disease determines whether the intention of the treatment is curative or palliative. Therefore, adequate preoperative staging is imperative for optimal treatment planning. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of conventional imaging techniques, including chest X-ray and/or CT thorax-(abdomen), liver ultrasonography(US), and skeletal scintigraphy, on the distant recurrence-free interval (DRFI) in patients with IBTR, and to compare conventional imaging with 18F-FDG PET-CT or no imaging at all. Methods This study was exclusively based on the information available at time of diagnoses of IBTR. To adjust for differences in baseline characteristics between the three imaging groups, a propensity score (PS) weighted method was used. Results Of the 495 patients included in the study, 229 (46.3%) were staged with conventional imaging, 89 patients (19.8%) were staged with 18F-FDG PET-CT, and in 168 of the patients (33.9%) no imaging was used (N=168). After a follow-up of approximately 5 years, 14.5% of all patients developed a distant recurrence as frst event after IBTR. After adjusting for the PS weights, the Cox regression analyses showed that the diferent staging methods had no signifcant impact on the DRFI. Conclusions This study showed a wide variation in the use of imaging modalities for staging IBTR patients in the Netherlands. After using PS weighting, no statistically signifcant impact of the diferent imaging modalities on DRFI was shown. Based on these results, it is not possible to recommend staging for distant metastases using 18F-FDG PET-CT over conventional imaging technique

    The sentinel lymph node in breast cancer patients: an evaluation of new developments in clinical practice.

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    Contains fulltext : 49794.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)At the moment, one in nine women has a lifetime risk for developing breast cancer. The most important prognostic factor is the histologic status of the axillary lymph nodes. Removal of these nodes might lead to morbidity in terms of lymphedema and shoulder complaints. In the nineties, the sentinel lymph node concept was introduced in breast cancer care. It is the first lymph node to receive lymph drainage from a primary tumour and will therefore contain metastatic disease if lymphatic metastasis occurs. This thesis evaluates new developments and reports consequences of the introduction of the sentinel lymph node biopsy. The initial experience with scrape cytology, a new technique for intraoperative examination, is described. Intraoperative examination has the advantage that if metastatic disease is detected, removal of the axillary lymph nodes can be performed in the same operation. A disadvantage is the risk for false-negative results. The results of scrape cytology are comparable with the results of frozen section and imprint cytology; it is therefore a useful method for intraoperative examination. To avoid the equivocal cytology results, the sentinel lymph node biopsy under local anesthesia preceding the breast surgery was introduced. Results of the biopsy performed under general and local anesthesia are comparable. A hospital-based and literature study was performed on regional recurrence after a negative sentinel node biopsy. The incidence of axillary relapse appeared much lower than expected conform the false negative results of the validation phase studies. The natural course of axillary recurrence seems to resemble locoregional recurrence after removal of all axillary lymph nodes. The Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre (NY, USA) nomogram predicts the risk for non-sentinel node metastases after a positive sentinel node biopsy. The nomogram also predicts with reasonable accuracy the risk for non-sentinel node metastases for a Dutch population of breast cancer patients. A comparison of estimations of surgical oncologists for the risk for non-sentinel lymph node metastases with the MSKCC nomogram showed only moderate concurrence. The type of hospital nor the amount of experience of the surgeon seemed to influence predicting abilities and the variation between the individual predictions of the various surgeons for the scenarios was important.RU Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 10 februari 2006Promotor : Wobbes, Th. Co-promotor : Strobbe, L.J.102 p

    Missing evidence for the adequacy of a 1-cm distal margin in resected rectal cancer.

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    Contains fulltext : 143699.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access

    Sentinel lymph node biopsy performed under local anesthesia is feasible.

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    Contains fulltext : 57733.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: A sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy in breast cancer patients, performed under local anesthesia (LA), could have advantages such as more efficient use of operating room time and pathologist time. It also provides a histologic diagnosis before definitive breast surgery is undertaken. The aim of this study was to assess feasibility by comparing the results of SLN procedures performed under LA versus general anesthesia (GA). METHODS: The SLN procedure was performed in 50 consecutive outpatients and 167 inpatients with clinical T1-2N0 breast cancer while they were under LA and GA, respectively. The SLN detection rate, a comparison of mapped and harvested SLNs, was compared for both groups. The duration of the SLN biopsies performed under LA was also measured. RESULTS: For both groups a median of 2 SLNs/patient were harvested. The detection rate was 1.00 for the LA group and 0.99 for the GA group. The learning curve for SLN procedures under LA showed a decrease in duration for the consecutive months (not significant). CONCLUSIONS: SLN biopsy can be safely and adequately performed with the patient under LA. It allows early diagnosis of the lymph node status, acquired on an outpatient basis, with minimal discomfort to the patient. The learning curve demonstrated that the LA procedure can quickly be mastered if the surgeon is experienced in performing SLN biopsies

    MINImal vs. MAXimal Invasive Axillary Staging and Treatment After Neoadjuvant Systemic Therapy in Node Positive Breast Cancer: Protocol of a Dutch Multicenter Registry Study (MINIMAX)

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    In node positive breast cancer patients who are treated with neoadjuvant systemic therapy, axillary staging and treatment is still a topic of debate. This multicenter study will contribute to evidence-based guidelines with regard to the oncologic safety and impact on quality of life of less vs. more invasive axillary staging and treatment strategies.Background: Node positive breast cancer (cN+) patients with an axillary pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NST) are not expected to benefit from axillary lymph node dissection (ALND). Therefore, less invasive axillary staging procedures have been introduced to establish response-guided treatment. However, evidence is lacking with regard to their oncologic safety and impact on quality of life (QoL). We hypothesize that if response-guided treatment is given, less invasive staging procedures are non-inferior to standard ALND in terms of oncologic safety, and superior to standard ALND in terms of QoL. Patients and Methods: MINIMAX is a Dutch multicenter registry study that includes patients with cN1-3M0 unilateral invasive breast cancer, who receive NST, followed by axillary staging and treatment according to local protocols. In a retrospective registry of +/- 4000 patients, the primar y endpoint is oncologic safety at 5 and 10 years (disease-free, breast-cancer-specific and overall survival, and axillary recurrence rate). In a prospective multicenter registry, the primar y endpoints are QoL at 1 and 5 years, and we aim to verify the 5-year oncologic safety. With an estimated 5-year disease-free survival of 72.5% and anticipated loss to follow-up of 10%, a sample size of 549 is needed to have 80% power to detect non-infer iority (with a 10% margin) of less invasive staging procedures. Conclusion: In cN+ patients treated with NST, less invasive axillary staging procedures are already implemented globally. Evidence is needed to support the assumed oncologic safety and superior QoL of such procedures. This study will contribute to evidence-based guidelines. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc
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