Breast Cancer
Online ISSN : 1880-4233
Print ISSN : 1340-6868
ISSN-L : 1340-6868
Case Reports
Two Cases with Long-Term Disease-Free Survival after Resection and Radiotherapy for Solitary Brain Metastasis from Breast Cancer with Extensive Nodal Metastases
Shinsuke SaishoShigemitsu TakashimaShozo OhsumiHideyuki SaekiKenjiro AogiToshiaki SaekiKoich MandaiShinji IwataTetsuji Takeda
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2005 Volume 12 Issue 3 Pages 221-225

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Abstract
Two rare cases, each with a solitary brain metastasis from breast cancer with extensive nodal metastases as the first site of distant metastasis, were locally treated with surgery and irradiation. The outcome of the two treated cases indicated an excellent and non-recurrent post-therapeutic survival period of more than 3 and 8 years, respectively. In a 50-year-old woman (Case 1), a solitary brain metastasis was found to have developed after standard radical mastectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy with doxorubicin and tegafur-uracil (UFT) and hormonal therapy with tamoxifen for left breast cancer. The brain metastasis was treated twice surgically followed by radiotherapy. One year and 6 months later, local recurrence of the brain metastasis appeared and was treated surgically again. No other treatment was done thereafter. Since then, no other distant or lymph node metastasis occurred, and to date her outcome has been non-eventful for 8 years and 5 months. In a 63-year-old woman (Case 2), a solitary brain metastasis was found to have developed after standard radical mastectomy and adjuvant chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, epirubicin and fluorouracil (CEF) for right breast cancer. The brain metastasis was treated locally with surgery and irradiation of 50 Gy. She thereafter received no further treatments. Since then neither distant metastases nor local recurrence have developed, and to date the post-treatment outcome has been uneventful for 37 months. Our findings suggest that patients who developed a solitary brain metastasis as the first site of distant metastasis from breast cancer have a chance of achieving long-term disease-free survival when treated with aggressive local therapy, even in the presence of extensive lymph node metastases at the primary surgery site for breast cancer.
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© 2005 by The Japanese Breast Cancer Society
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