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ABSTRACT: Twenty-Year Follow-up of a Randomized Study Comparing
Breast-Conserving Surgery with Radical Mastectomy for Early Breast
Cancer
Background: We conducted 20 years of follow-up of women enrolled
in a randomized trial to compare the efficacy of radical (Halsted)
mastectomy with that of breast-conserving surgery.
Methods: From 1973 to 1980, 701 women with breast cancers measuring
no more than 2 cm in diameter were randomly assigned to undergo
radical mastectomy (349 patients) or breast-conserving surgery
(quadrantectomy) followed by radiotherapy to the ipsilateral
mammary tissue (352 patients).
After 1976, patients in both groups
who had positive axillary nodes also received adjuvant chemotherapy
with cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and fluorouracil.
Results: Thirty women in the group that underwent breast-conserving
therapy had a recurrence of tumor in the same breast, whereas
eight women in the radical-mastectomy group had local recurrences
(P<0.001). The crude cumulative incidence of these events
was 8.8 percent and 2.3 percent, respectively, after 20 years.
In contrast, there was no significant difference between the
two groups in the rates of contralateral-breast carcinomas, distant
metastases, or second primary cancers. After a median follow-up
of 20 years, the rate of death from all causes was 41.7 percent
in the group that underwent breast-conserving surgery and 41.2
percent in the radical-mastectomy group (P=1.0).
The respective
rates of death from breast cancer were 26.1 percent and 24.3
percent (P=0.8).
Conclusions: The long-term survival rate among women who undergo
breast-conserving surgery is the same as that among women who
undergo radical mastectomy.
Breast-conserving surgery is therefore
the treatment of choice for women with relatively small breast
cancers.
[10/17/2002; New England Journal of Medicine]
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