S'abonner

Axillary dissection versus no axillary dissection in patients with breast cancer and sentinel-node micrometastases (IBCSG 23-01): 10-year follow-up of a randomised, controlled phase 3 trial - 03/10/18

Doi : 10.1016/S1470-2045(18)30380-2 
Viviana Galimberti, MD a, , Bernard F Cole, ProfPhD c, Giuseppe Viale, ProfMD b, d, Paolo Veronesi, ProfMD a, d, Elisa Vicini, MD a, Mattia Intra, MD a, Giovanni Mazzarol, MD b, Samuele Massarut, MD e, Janez Zgajnar, ProfMD f, Mario Taffurelli, ProfMD g, David Littlejohn, MBBS h, Michael Knauer, ProfMD i, Carlo Tondini, MD j, Angelo Di Leo, MD k, Marco Colleoni, MD a, Meredith M Regan, ScD l, Alan S Coates, ProfMD m, Richard D Gelber, ProfPhD l, n, o, Aron Goldhirsch, ProfMD p
for the

International Breast Cancer Study Group Trial 23-01*

  Investigators, leadership, and staff of the Group are listed in the appendix (pp 2,3)
Fran Boyle, Guy Jerusalem, Rolf Stahel, Stefan Aebi, Michael Green, Per Karlsson, Ingrid Kössler, Istvan Láng, Anita Hiltbrunner, Jürg Bernhard, Stamatina Fournarakou, Roswitha Kammler, Rudolf Maibach, Manuela Rabaglio, Karin Ribi, Heidi Roschitzki, Susanne Roux, Barbara Ruepp, Caitlin Mahoney, Karen Price, Lynette Blacher, Tara Scolese, Karolyn Scott, Sandra Lippert, Theresa Zielinski, Mauro Mastropasqua, Stefania Andrighetto, Patrizia Dell’Orto, Giuseppe Renne, Giancarlo Pruneri, Silvia Dellapasqua, Monica Iorfida, Giuseppe Cancello, Emilia Montagna, Anna Cardillo, Giulia Peruzzotti, Raffaella Ghisini, Alberto Luini, Umberto Veronesi, Mattia Intra, Oreste Gentilini, Stefano Zurrida, Giuseppe Curigliano, Franco Nole, Roberto Orecchia, Marisa Cristina Leonardi, Paola Baratella, Camelia Chifu, Manuela Sargenti, Diana Crivellari, Sandro Morassut, Mario Mileto, Erica Piccoli, Andreas Veronesi, Marisa Donatella Magri, Angelo Buonadonna, Ezio Candiani, Antonino Carbone, Tiziana Perin, Rachele Volpe, Mario Roncadin, Mauro Arcicasa, Francesco Coran, Manuela Lagrassa, Angelo Recalcati, Maria Emanuela Limonta, Paolo Tricomi, Privato Fenaroli, Elisabetta Candiago, Laura Cattaneo, Alberto Gianatti, Donatella Santini, Sylvie Maweja, Philippe Delvenne, Andrée Rorive, Joëlle Collignon, Jean-Remi Garbay, Marie-Christine Mathieu, Hanne Galatius, Jack Hoffmann, Peer Schousen, Charlotte Lanng, John Hoerby, Birgitte Bruun Rasmussen, Helle Holtveg, Maj-Lis Moeller Talman, Julio Elías Abugattas, Jose Manuel Cotrina, Richard Dyer, Jurij Lindtner, Elga Majdic, Snjezana Frkovic-Grazio, Christian Oehlschlegel, Gerhard Ries, Michael Töpfer, Ute Lorenz, Otto Schiltknecht, Bruno Späti, Andreas Ehrsam, Monika Bamert, Martina Egli-Tupaj, Christoph Rageth, Elisabeth Saurenmann, Christoph Tausch, Rosmarie Caduff, Holger Moch, Zsuzsanna Varga, Dimitri Sarlos, Elena Kralidis, Rainer Grobholz, Olivia Pagani, Lucia Bronz, Michele Ghielmini, Luca Mazzucchelli, Tiziana Rusca, Thomas Gyr, Linda Leidi, Giorgio Caccia, Daniel Wyss, Martin F. Fey, Michael Müller, Andreas Günthert, Gilles Berclaz, Achim Fleischmann, Jean Francois Delaloye, Assia Treboux, Hans-Anton Lehr, Maryse Fiche, Lucien Perey, Lucien Zaman, Wendy Jeanneret Sozzi, John Forbes, D.F. Lindsay, D.F. Preece, Jane Hill, P. Jeal, P. Smart, John Collins, Gregory Bruce Mann, Robert Millar, Craig Murphy, Malcolm Buchanan, Anand Murugasu, James French, Elisabeth Elder, Lynette Mann, David Moon, A. Michael Bilous, Nirmala Pathmanathan, Virginia Howard, Petere G. Gill, James Kollias, Melissa Bochner, Linda Madigan, Elisabeth Rippy, Robert Whitfield, Fereshte Farshidi, Katrina Moore, Mark Sywak, L. Tan, William Ross, Karen Briscoe, Allison Jones, Aashit Shah, Elgene Lim, Robert Macindoe, Andrew Spillane, Katrina Moore, S. Fiona Bonar, Hugh Carmalt, Richard West, Cindy Mak, Paul McKenzie, Richard Harman, Susanne Gerred, Eva Juhasz, Stephen Allpress, Julie Craik, Ian Campbell, Paul Chin, Lori Hayes, Frederick Mayall, M. Thorburn

a Division of Senology, IEO, European Institute of Oncology IRCCS, Milan, Italy 
b International Breast Cancer Study Group (IBCSG) Central Pathology Office, Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, IEO, European Institute of Oncology IRCCS, Milan, Italy 
c IBCSG Statistical Center and Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA 
d University of Milan, Milan, Italy 
e Centro di Riferimento Oncologico, Aviano, Italy 
f Department of Surgical Oncology, Institute of Oncology, Ljubljana, Slovenia 
g Orsola Hospital and University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy 
h Riverina Cancer Care Centre, Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia 
i Breast Center St Gallen, Kantonsspital, St Gallen, Switzerland 
j Department of Medical Oncology, Ospedale Papa Giovanni XXIII, Bergamo, Italy 
k Hospital of Prato-AUSL Toscana Centro, Istituto Toscano Tumori, Prato, Italy 
l IBCSG Statistical Center, Department of Biostatistics and Computational Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA 
m IBCSG and University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia 
n Harvard T H Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA 
o Frontier Science and Technology Research Foundation, Boston, MA, USA 
p IBCSG and European Institute of Oncology, Milan, Italy 

* Correspondence to: Dr Viviana Galimberti, Department of Surgery, European Institute of Oncology, Milan, 20141, Italy Department of Surgery European Institute of Oncology Milan 20141 Italy

Summary

Background

We previously reported the 5-year results of the phase 3 IBCSG 23-01 trial comparing disease-free survival in patients with breast cancer with one or more micrometastatic (≤2 mm) sentinel nodes randomly assigned to either axillary dissection or no axillary dissection. The results showed no difference in disease-free survival between the groups and showed non-inferiority of no axillary dissection relative to axillary dissection. The current analysis presents the results of the study after a median follow-up of 9·7 years (IQR 7·8–12·7).

Methods

In this multicentre, randomised, controlled, open-label, non-inferiority, phase 3 trial, participants were recruited from 27 hospitals and cancer centres in nine countries. Eligible women could be of any age with clinical, mammographic, ultrasonographic, or pathological diagnosis of breast cancer with largest lesion diameter of 5 cm or smaller, and one or more metastatic sentinel nodes, all of which were 2 mm or smaller and with no extracapsular extension. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) before surgery (mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery) to no axillary dissection or axillary dissection using permuted blocks generated by a web-based congruence algorithm, with stratification by centre and menopausal status. The protocol-specified primary endpoint was disease-free survival, analysed in the intention-to-treat population (as randomly assigned). Safety was assessed in all randomly assigned patients who received their allocated treatment (as treated). We did a one-sided test for non-inferiority of no axillary dissection by comparing the observed hazard ratios (HRs) for disease-free survival with a margin of 1·25. This 10-year follow-up analysis was not prespecified in the trial’s protocol and thus was not adjusted for multiple, sequential testing. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00072293.

Findings

Between April 1, 2001, and Feb 8, 2010, 6681 patients were screened and 934 randomly assigned to no axillary dissection (n=469) or axillary dissection (n=465). Three patients were ineligible and were excluded from the trial after randomisation. Disease-free survival at 10 years was 76·8% (95% CI 72·5–81·0) in the no axillary dissection group, compared with 74·9% (70·5–79·3) in the axillary dissection group (HR 0·85, 95% CI 0·65–1·11; log-rank p=0·24; p=0·0024 for non-inferiority). Long-term surgical complications included lymphoedema of any grade in 16 (4%) of 453 patients in the no axillary dissection group and 60 (13%) of 447 in the axillary dissection group, sensory neuropathy of any grade in 57 (13%) in the no axillary dissection group versus 85 (19%) in the axillary dissection group, and motor neuropathy of any grade (14 [3%] in the no axillary dissection group vs 40 [9%] in the axillary dissection group). One serious adverse event (postoperative infection and inflamed axilla requiring hospital admission) was attributed to axillary dissection; the event resolved without sequelae.

Interpretation

The findings of the IBCSG 23-01 trial after a median follow-up of 9·7 years (IQR 7·8–12·7) corroborate those obtained at 5 years and are consistent with those of the 10-year follow-up analysis of the Z0011 trial. Together, these findings support the current practice of not doing an axillary dissection when the tumour burden in the sentinel nodes is minimal or moderate in patients with early breast cancer.

Funding

International Breast Cancer Study Group.

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Vol 19 - N° 10

P. 1385-1393 - octobre 2018 Retour au numéro
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