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Published in: Breast Cancer Research 3/2009

01-12-2009 | Section introduction

Who would have thought it! Influence on outcome of radiotherapy, Ki67 and stroma. Introduction to Session 5

Author: Alan Rodger

Published in: Breast Cancer Research | Special Issue 3/2009

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Excerpt

In breast cancer there are clearly a number of factors that counter-intuitively influence outcome or for which there is a change, after a considerable time, in longstanding evidence that outcome was not affected. The latter is well represented by the effect of postoperative radiotherapy in early breast cancer on overall survival. There was clear evidence that such treatment reduced local recurrence risk (by about two-thirds) and risk of death from breast cancer (by one-sixth [1]), but until 1997 evidence suggested treatment would not improve overall survival. The results in that year of two randomised trials in high-risk patients showed that the addition of postmastectomy radiotherapy to adjuvant chemotherapy improved overall survival [2, 3]. …
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go back to reference Dowsett M, A'Hern R, Salter J, Zabaglo L, Smith I: Who would have thought a single Ki67 measurement would predict long-term outcome?. Breast Cancer Res. 2009, 11 (Suppl 3): S15-10.1186/bcr2276.CrossRefPubMed Dowsett M, A'Hern R, Salter J, Zabaglo L, Smith I: Who would have thought a single Ki67 measurement would predict long-term outcome?. Breast Cancer Res. 2009, 11 (Suppl 3): S15-10.1186/bcr2276.CrossRefPubMed
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Metadata
Title
Who would have thought it! Influence on outcome of radiotherapy, Ki67 and stroma. Introduction to Session 5
Author
Alan Rodger
Publication date
01-12-2009
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Breast Cancer Research / Issue Special Issue 3/2009
Electronic ISSN: 1465-542X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr2432

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