Research Grant
[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/393703]Researchers: Prof David Joseph (Principal investigator) , Mrs Tammy Corica , Prof Boon Chua , Prof Christobel Saunders , Prof Max Bulsara
Brief description With the advent of breast screening in Australia many women are diagnosed with small low risk cancers that can be treated with breast conserving therapy with good outcomes. Surgery and radiotherapy in this situation are used to minimise the risk of local recurrence. It is now being questioned whether we can tailor radiotherapy to suit individual patients rather than recommending the daily 6-7 weeks of standard external beam radiotherapy to all patients. This trial aims to answer this question as a new device which can deliver radiotherapy intraoperatively in a single session has now been tested and proven safe to use in the breast. The main objective of this trial is to demonstrate that a single dose of radiotherapy delivered intraoperatively (IORT) gives an equivalent local control rate to standard external beam radiotherapy in women with early low risk breast cancer who are suitable for breast conserving therapy. Other objectives include comparing the two treatments with respect to; disease-free-overall survival, cosmetic outcome, patient satisfaction-preference, quality of life and cost benefit. If the study finds that IORT alone after breast conserving surgery is as effective in achieving local control as standard external beam radiotherapy, a major benefit to patients would be shorter treatment duration by avoiding the 6-7 weeks of standard radiotherapy. A reduction in the number of early breast cancer patients requiring access to standard radiotherapy would also benefit treatment centres and other cancer patients by reducing the waiting times for radiotherapy. Consumer groups have supported the concept from the beginning and there has been recent increase in level of support by originally unsupportive groups. Of great significance is this trial offers an opportunity to formally investigate the efficacy of delivering IORT in the safe confines of a clinical trial, before allowing it to become a standard treatment which is occurring in other countries.
Funding Amount $AUD 874,046.78
Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants
Notes Standard Project Grant
- nhmrc : 393703
- PURL : https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/393703