Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 16, 480-486, Copyright © 1998 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
Skin recurrences after breast-conserving therapy for early-stage breast cancer
I Gage, SJ Schnitt, A Recht, A Abner, S Come, LN Shulman, JM Monson, B Silver, JR Harris and JL Connolly
Joint Center for Radiation Therapy, Boston, MA, USA. gageir@wpmail.onc.jhu.edu
PURPOSE: To assess the frequency and prognosis of skin recurrences after
breast-conserving therapy (BCT) compared with other breast recurrences.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: From 1968 to 1986, 1,624 patients with unilateral
stage I or II breast cancer treated with BCT at the Joint Center for
Radiation Therapy (Boston, MA) underwent gross tumor excision and received
a dose of > or = 60 Gy to the tumor bed. Skin recurrences (SR) were
defined as breast recurrences without associated parenchymal disease. An
invasive breast recurrence with any parenchymal disease noted clinically or
radiographically was scored as an other breast recurrence (OBR). Median
follow-up for survivors was 137 months. RESULTS: SR represented 8% (18 of
229) of all breast recurrences and occurred in 1.1% of all patients. The
outcome after local recurrence was different for patients with SR and
invasive OBR. Patients with SR more frequently had uncontrolled local
failure (50%; 9 of 18) than did patients with OBR (14%; 26 of 188) (P =
.0007). Forty-four percent (8 of 18) of patients with SR had distant
metastasis simultaneously or within 2 months of the recurrence compared
with 5% (9 of 188) of invasive OBR patients (P < .0001). For patients
without distant metastasis at the time of recurrence, the 5-year actuarial
rate of development of distant metastasis was 60% for SR patients compared
with 39% for invasive OBR patients (P = .07), and the corresponding 5-year
actuarial survival rates beyond the time of local failure were 51% and 79%,
respectively (P = .06). CONCLUSION: In contrast to other types of invasive
breast recurrence after breast-conserving therapy, skin recurrences are
rare and are associated with a significantly higher rate of distant
metastasis and uncontrolled local disease as well as a lower rate of
survival.