Overview
This clinical research aims to determine if concurrent chemotherapy and radiation therapy is more effective than sequential chemotherapy and radiation therapy for patients with stage IIB-III breast cancer. It seeks to answer the following key questions:
- When compared to sequential treatment, does concurrent chemoradiotherapy increase disease-free survival?
- What effects does concurrent treatment have on post-operative look, quality of life, and side effects including arm swelling (lymphoedema)?
- What are each treatment approach's financial costs?
Researchers will compare the following to groups:
Arm A: Participants in the sequential treatment group will first undergo chemotherapy and then radiation.
and Arm B: Participants in the concurrent treatment group will undergo radiation therapy while undergoing chemotherapy.
Participants are going to:
- Get the usual chemotherapy (taxanes and/or anthracyclines).
- Receive radiation therapy for three to four weeks.
- Have follow-up visits every 6months for 5years to check for cancer recurrence, side effects, and quality of life.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Pathologically confirmed invasive breast cancer
- Stage IIB-III invasive breast cancer (AJCC 8th edition)
- Patients planned for adjuvant chemotherapy and adjuvant radiotherapy
- Patients fit to receive adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy
- Age > 18 years
Exclusion Criteria:
- Hypersensitivity to taxanes
- Patients receiving entire chemotherapy prior to surgery (neoadjuvant setting)
- Unable or unwilling for regular follow up
- Bilateral tumour needed RT to both sides
- Patients planned for RT to oligometastatic sites
- Unfavourable anatomical factors potentially leading to higher radiotherapy dose to heart and/or lungs (Exceeding the protocol specific mandatory dose constraints).
- Pregnant patient