TURKISH JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY 2017 , Vol 1 , Num 1
The Effect of Adjuvant Therapies for Recurrence in Stage I Breast Cancer Patients: A Single Centre Experience
İzzet DOĞAN1,Nijat KHANMAMMADOV1,Esra AYDIN1,Nail PAKSOY1,Ferhat FERHATOĞLU1,Naziye AK1,Selman EMIROĞLU2,Kamuran İBIŞ3,Semen ÖNDER4,Mustafa TÜKENMEZ2,Hasan KARANLIK2,Neslihan CABIOĞLU2,Seden KÜÇÜCÜK3,Mahmut MÜSLÜMANOĞLU2,Vahit ÖZMEN2,Pınar SAIP1,Abdullah İĞCI2,Adnan AYDINER1
1Department of Medical Oncology, İstanbul University Institute of Oncology, İstanbul-Türkiye
2Department of Surgery, İstanbul University Faculty of Medicine, İstanbul-Türkiye
3Department of Radiation Oncology, İstanbul University Institute of Oncology, İstanbul-Türkiye
4Department of Pathology, İstanbul University Faculty of Medicine, İstanbul-Türkiye
DOI : 10.5505/tjo.2024.4209 OBJECTIVE
Breast cancer is the most diagnosed cancer in females. Cancer screening programs increase the detection of early-stage breast cancer. This study aimed to assess the long-term outcomes and the effect of adjuvant therapies for recurrence in stage I breast cancer patients.

METHODS
We recorded clinicopathological and treatment features of the stage I breast cancer patients and evaluated long-term outcomes retrospectively. Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox regression analysis were used for recurrence and overall survival.

RESULTS
308 patients with stage I breast cancer were involved in the study. The average age was 52 (range 21-81). The median follow-up was 99 (12-380) months. Forty-three (14%) patients were aged over 65, and 162 (52.7%) patients were postmenopausal. ER, PR, and HER2 receptor positivity were 78.9%, 60.8%, and 14.3%, respectively. Lumpectomy plus adjuvant radiotherapy was performed in 82.1% of the patients, and mastectomy in 10.7% of the patients for primary treatment. The patients received adjuvant chemotherapy (42.5%) and adjuvant hormonal therapy (79.9%). Recurrence (local-47.8%, metastatic-52.2%) occurred in 23 (7.5%) patients. In multivariate Cox regression analysis, we found that primary treatment (lumpectomy + adjuvant RT or mastectomy) (p=0.614), surgical margin status (p=0.495), adjuvant chemotherapy (p=0.259), and adjuvant hormonal therapy (p=0.289) were not statistically significant factors for recurrence. However, aged over 65 years (p=0.002) was statistically significant.

CONCLUSION
In this study, we showed long-term outcomes in stage I breast cancer patients. It was shown that the primary treatment type (lumpectomy + adjuvant RT or mastectomy) was not different in terms of recurrence. In addition, it was determined that adjuvant chemotherapy did not provide benefit for recurrence in stage I breast cancer patients in our results. For this reason, in patients with stage I cancer, more care should be taken in the decision of adjuvant therapy. Keywords : Adjuvant; breast cancer; chemotherapy; radiotherapy; stage I.