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Radiation Therapy Boost Before Surgery for the Treatment of Non-metastatic Breast Cancer

A Single Center Phase II Prospective Clinical Trial to Assess the Feasibility of Preoperative Radiation Boost in Breast Cancer Patients

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04871516
Enrollment
103
Registered
2021-05-04
Start date
2021-05-18
Completion date
2028-01-31
Last updated
2026-01-22

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Anatomic Stage 0 Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage I Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage IA Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage IB Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage II Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage IIA Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Anatomic Stage IIB Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Invasive Breast Carcinoma, Non-Metastatic Breast Carcinoma, Prognostic Stage 0 Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage I Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IA Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IB Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage II Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IIA Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IIB Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage III Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IIIA Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IIIB Breast Cancer AJCC v8, Prognostic Stage IIIC Breast Cancer AJCC v8

Brief summary

This phase II trial investigates the safety of delivering a part (boost) of radiation treatment before breast surgery in treating patients with breast cancer that has not spread to other places in the body (non-metastatic). Radiation therapy uses high energy photons/electrons to kill tumor cells and shrink tumors. Delivering a boost radiation treatment before surgery when doctors can still visualize the tumor on imaging may help to better target the tumor and decrease the volume of normal irradiated tissue. By so doing, doctors may achieve better cosmetic outcomes and possibly better tumor control.

Detailed description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: I. To demonstrate that the incidence of grade 3 or more wound complications in patients with non-metastatic node negative breast cancer who are eligible for breast conserving surgery (BCS) and treated with pre-operative radiation boost at 1 month after end of whole breast radiation is no worse than the rates in the current standard of care (6-20%). SECONDARY OBJECTIVE: I. To demonstrate that the physician reported cosmetic outcome at 1 and 3 years after the end of treatment is better than what has been reported for the current standard of practice for patients undergoing BCS and hypofractionated whole breast irradiation (WBI). TERTIARY/EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES: I. To measure the acute and late radiation related toxicities such as radiation dermatitis, telangiectasia and fibrosis in this cohort of patients. II. To measure the pre-operative boost clinical target volume (CTV) and compare to the post-op CTV volume that would have been contoured as CTV if the boost was to be delivered post-operatively. III. To measure the incidence of fair/poor patient reported cosmetic outcome using the Breast Cancer Treatment Outcomes Scale (BCTOS) cosmetic scale. IV. To study the cancer biology before and after radiation treatment. OUTLINE: Prior to surgery, patients undergo radiation therapy boost over 4 fractions. Patients then undergo standard of care surgery 1-3 weeks from the last day of boost. 3 to 5 weeks after surgery, patients continue standard of care WBI in the absence of disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up at 1, 3, 6, 9, 12, 18, and 24 months

Interventions

OTHERQuality-of-Life Assessment

Ancillary studies

OTHERQuestionnaire Administration

Ancillary studies

Undergo radiation therapy boost

Undergo standard surgery

RADIATIONWhole Breast Irradiation

Undergo standard WBI

A baseline breast MRI

Sponsors

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Lead SponsorOTHER
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
CollaboratorNIH

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Breast cancer patients with biopsy proven invasive cancer * Clinically and radiographically node negative * No indication of metastatic disease * Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0-1 * Synchronous bilateral invasive cancer allowed * Negative serum pregnancy test within one month from the radiation therapy (RT) boost delivery * Willingness to participate in the clinical trial and adhere to the study protocol * Individuals of all races, genders and ethnic groups are eligible for this trial

Exclusion criteria

* Need for neoadjuvant chemotherapy * Inflammatory breast cancer (cT4) * Multicentric tumor * Prior ipsilateral breast or thoracic RT * Contraindication for baseline magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) * Contraindication for surgery * Distant metastatic disease * Other synchronous cancer (besides bilateral breast) * Contraindication to radiation therapy (presence of scleroderma or other collagen vascular disease) * Any serious or uncontrolled medical disorder that, in the opinion of the investigator, may increase the risk associated with study participation or study drug administration, impair the ability of the subject to receive protocol therapy, or interfere with the interpretation of study results

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in wound status from baseline every 3-6 months after WBI to access incidence of grade 3 or more wound complications after breast conserving surgery.For at least 36 months after WBIWound complications will be assessed by the surgeon and radiation oncologist and graded using descriptions and grading scales found in the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5 (CTCAE v 5.0). This will be calculated as a proportion based on the number of events in the study. Will report the proportion with a 95% confidence interval (CI) using the Clopper-Pearson method.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Physician reported cosmesisAt 1 month after whole breast irradiation (WBI)Physician reported cosmesis will be assessed using the Harvard Cosmesis assessment Scale for Breast Cancer Patients which is a 4-point scale describing the breast cosmetic outcome (excellent, good, fair or poor).

Countries

United States

Contacts

PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATORBruce G Haffty

Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026