# Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer With Oligometastatic Cervical Lymph Nodes: A Case Report

**Authors:** Hiroshi Burioka, Unta Yamamori, Natsuko Nagano, Atsushi Ue, Yukihisa Tamaki

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.51617 · Cureus · 2024-01-03

## TL;DR

A breast cancer patient with limited cervical lymph node metastases was successfully treated with a combination of surgery, systemic therapy, and radiation.

## Contribution

This case report demonstrates the effectiveness of radical radiation therapy for oligometastatic cervical lymph nodes in breast cancer.

## Key findings

- Multimodality treatment including radical radiation therapy achieved a cure in a breast cancer patient with oligometastatic cervical lymph nodes.
- The patient remained recurrence-free for two years and four months after completing radiation therapy.

## Abstract

Stage IV breast cancer is difficult to cure and is mainly treated with systemic therapy. However, when distant metastasis is oligometastatic, proactive treatment including local therapies for the primary lesion and distant metastases has been reported to improve prognosis. We encountered a patient who had left breast cancer with ipsilateral cervical lymph node metastases. The metastases were oligometastatic, and we treated them curatively. The patient was a female in her 50s who had been aware of a lump in the lower inner quadrant of the left breast for a few years. A biopsy was performed and left breast cancer was diagnosed pathologically. Radiological examination showed metastasis to ipsilateral axillary and cervical lymph nodes. The cervical lymph node metastases were oligometastatic, suggesting possible improvement in prognosis by multimodality treatment including local therapy. The multimodality treatment in this case comprised mastectomy with levels I and II axillary lymph node dissection, systemic therapy (including chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, and molecular targeted therapy), and postmastectomy radiation therapy. The left chest wall and left supraclavicular lymph node region were irradiated. Furthermore, following the postmastectomy radiation therapy, the cervical lymph node metastases were treated with radical radiation therapy. The cure was achieved, with recurrence-free status maintained for two years and four months after the completion of radiation therapy. This case suggests that, for breast cancer with oligometastatic involvement of cervical lymph nodes, locally treating these distant metastatic lesions with radical radiation therapy as part of multimodality treatment is beneficial.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** breast cancer (MONDO:0004989)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Breast Cancer (MESH:D001943), lump (MESH:C536531), metastases (MESH:D009362), Cervical Lymph Nodes (MESH:D000072717), lymph node metastases (MESH:D008207)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10837370/full.md

## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10837370/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10837370