Inflammatory local recurrence after breast-conservation therapy for noninflammatory breast cancer.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Inflammatory local recurrence after breast-conserving therapy for noninflammatory breast cancer is uncommon and carries a poor prognosis. Over a 5-year period, 7 such cases were treated at the New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill-Cornell Medical Center. The characteristics of these 7 patients were compiled and are reviewed along with a discussion of inflammatory recurrence. Tumor size, location, histologic type, grade, stage, margin status, lymphovascular invasion (LVI), estrogen receptor (ER) status, progesterone receptor (PgR) status, adjuvant therapy, and/or radiation therapy at the time of primary treatment and at recurrence were analyzed. The median survival time was 79 months (range, 26-130 months) for patients initially ER-positive, compared with 23 months (range, 0-67 months) for initially ER-negative patients. The median survival for patients without lymph node involvement was 78 months (range, 26-130 months) compared with 41 months (range, 0-79 months) for those with nodal metastases. Survival time in this series of inflammatory local recurrences correlated with the ER status and lymph node involvement of the primary lesion. The optimal management for inflammatory local recurrence is a multimodality approach combining preoperative chemotherapy and surgery.