Risk factors for breast fibrosis and unfavorable cosmetic outcomes after breast conserving therapy in the contemporary treatment era: a systematic review
M.C.A.W. Notenboom, W.D. Heemsbergen, M. Franckena, L.B. Koppert, M.A.M. Mureau, R.A. Nout, M.B.E. Menke-Pluijmers, F.E. Froklage

TL;DR
This systematic review identifies risk factors for breast fibrosis and poor cosmetic outcomes after breast-conserving therapy, highlighting the need for better research on newer surgical and radiotherapy techniques.
Contribution
The study systematically reviews contemporary risk factors for fibrosis and cosmetic outcomes after breast-conserving therapy, including dose homogeneity as a novel factor.
Findings
Increasing age, larger tumor size, and high boost dose are risk factors for fibrosis and poor cosmetic outcomes.
Dose homogeneity is a newly identified risk factor in the context of modern radiotherapy techniques.
There is a lack of high-quality data on outcomes with complex oncoplastic surgery and ultra-hypo fractionated radiotherapy.
Abstract
This systematic review aimed to identify risk factors for fibrosis and unfavorable cosmetic outcomes after breast conserving therapy (BCT) for breast cancer in the light of contemporary oncoplastic surgery and 3D-radiotherapy techniques. The systematic literature search was carried out in Embase, Ovid Medline, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and CINAHL. Studies published after 2005, reporting two or more risk factors for fibrosis or unfavorable cosmetic outcomes as primary outcomes were eligible for inclusion. Only prospective studies with 100 or more patients analyzed were included. The Quality In Prognosis Studies tool and Cochrane risk-of-bias tool were used to assess risk of bias. Patient, tumor, and treatment-related predictors were identified. Twelve papers investigating 12.118 patients were identified. Risk factors for both the development of fibrosis and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreast Cancer Treatment Studies · Effects of Radiation Exposure · Breast Lesions and Carcinomas
