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Erschienen in: Strahlentherapie und Onkologie 5/2017

Open Access 23.02.2017 | Original Article

Better compliance with hypofractionation vs. conventional fractionation in adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy

Results of a single, institutional, retrospective study

verfasst von: Prof. Dr. med. Volker Rudat, Alaa Nour, Mohamed Hammoud, Salam Abou Ghaida

Erschienen in: Strahlentherapie und Onkologie | Ausgabe 5/2017

Abstract

Background

The aim of the study was to identify factors significantly associated with the occurrence of unintended treatment interruptions in adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy.

Patients and methods

Patients treated with postoperative radiotherapy of the breast or chest wall between March 2014 and August 2016 were evaluated. The radiotherapy regimens and techniques applied were either conventional fractionation (CF; 28 daily fractions of 1.8 Gy or 25 fractions of 2.0 Gy) or hypofractionation (HF; 15 daily fractions of 2.67 Gy) with inverse planned intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or three-dimensional planned conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT). Logistic regression analysis was used to identify factors associated with noncompliance. Noncompliance was defined as the missing of at least one scheduled radiotherapy fraction.

Results

In all, 19 of 140 (13.6%) patients treated with HF and 39 of 146 (26.7%) treated with CF experienced treatment interruptions. Of 23 factors tested, the fractionation regimen emerged as the only independent significant prognostic factor for noncompliance on multivariate analysis (CF; p = 0.007; odds ratio, 2.3; 95% confidence interval, 1.3–4.2). No statistically significant differences concerning the reasons for treatment interruptions could be detected between patients treated with CF or HF.

Conclusion

HF is significantly associated with a better patient compliance with the prescribed radiotherapy schedule compared with CF. The data suggest that this finding is basically related to the shorter overall treatment time of HF.

Background

Unintended treatment interruptions may lead to a prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time. For radiotherapy with curative intent, prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time has been linked to inferior clinical outcomes [13]. This association appears to be consistent across many disease sites including head and neck cancer, cervical cancer, lung cancer, breast cancer, and other cancers [4, 5]. Prospective and retrospective studies have shown that treatment prolongation can increase the risk of local recurrence by up to 2% per day for certain malignancies [5].
The association between prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time and inferior clinical outcomes has been explained with an accelerated repopulation of tumor clonogens, which can occur after treatment initiation [6]. It has also been reported that noncompliance may serve as a behavioral biomarker for other risk factors that contribute to poor outcomes, such as noncompliance with other important clinician visits and procedures, lack of social support, and mood disorders [4].
In this study, we analyzed the compliance to the prescribed radiotherapy schedule of breast cancer patients treated with postoperative radiotherapy of the whole breast or chest wall. The goal of the study was to identify factors significantly associated with the occurrence of treatment interruptions.

Patients and methods

Data collection and patient selection

The electronic patient files of 286 consecutive unselected patients treated with adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy between March 2014 and August 2016 were reviewed. Eligibility criteria for the analysis were (a) histologically proven diagnosis of breast cancer or carcinoma in situ and (b) treatment with adjuvant postoperative radiotherapy after breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy. Exclusion criteria were bilateral breast cancer or history of previous radiotherapy of the breast or chest wall.
Patients were treated with either conventional fractionation (CF; 28 daily fractions of 1.8 Gy or 25 fractions of 2.0 Gy) or hypofractionation (HF; 15 daily fractions of 2.67 Gy). Where indicated, an electron boost was applied (five or eight daily fractions of 2.0 Gy). Radiotherapy fractions were scheduled once per day and five times per week. Patients who missed radiotherapy fractions were offered to be treated on weekends in order not to exceed the prescribed overall treatment time. The radiation techniques used were inverse planned intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or three-dimensional planned conformal radiotherapy using wedge compensation (3DCRT). The patients were thoroughly informed about the pros and cons of the two fractionation regimens and radiation techniques, and the treatment decision was mainly based on patient preference. Patients not covered, or not fully covered, by medical insurance tended to opt for 3DCRT for financial reasons. Patients with personal commitments limiting the overall treatment time or patients living far away from the radiotherapy facility tended to opt for HF.
The acute radiation reactions and reasons for treatment interruptions were documented prospectively in the Local Area Network Therapy Information System “Lantis” (Siemens Healthcare, Germany). The acute radiation reactions were assessed once weekly during radiotherapy and 6 weeks after radiotherapy by two observers using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE v4.03). The two observers were not involved in the statistical analysis of the study, and a table with all weekly assessments was included in the “End of Treatment Report” of all patients. The maximum acute radiation reaction observed during the full course of the radiotherapy (including the boost to the tumor bed if applied) was used for the statistical analysis. Treatment interruptions were defined as missing at least one of the scheduled daily radiotherapy fractions. The reasons for treatment interruptions were categorized into “public holidays,” “patient unwillingness,” “machine breakdown,” “radiation reactions,” and “unspecified,” and documented prospectively together with the length of the treatment interruption.
The study was approved by the local institutional ethics committee and conducted in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration in its current version.

Treatment planning and radiation techniques

The treatment planning and radiation techniques used for this study have been described in detail elsewhere [79]. In short, a non-contrast computed tomography (CT) simulation with a slice thickness of 5 mm was performed with the patient in the supine position. The planning target volume (PTV) of the whole breast or chest wall was defined according to the recommendations of the breast cancer atlas for radiation therapy planning consensus definitions of the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) [10]. The IMRT and 3DCRT plans were generated using the treatment planning system XIO 4.4 (CMS, Inc., St. Louis, Mo.). The dose to the PTV was prescribed according to the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurement (ICRU) Reports 50 and 62 recommendations. Two Siemens Oncor Anvantgarde linear accelerators with a 160 MLC Multileaf Collimator were used for the treatment. Daily online verification and correction of the patient positioning error prior to radiotherapy were performed for all patients using orthogonal megavoltage electronic portal images [11]. No respiratory gating [1214], integrated boost [15, 16], or partial breast irradiation [17] techniques were applied in this study. Two tangential semi-opposed beams, physical wedges (usually 15° or 30°), a 160 MLC Multileaf Collimator and 6 MV photons were used for the IMRT and 3DCRT plans. Occasionally a mixed-beam technique using 6 MV and 15 MV photons was used for the 3DCRT plans. Inverse treatment planning and a step-and-shoot technique were used for all IMRT plans. Tissue inhomogeneities were considered in the treatment planning optimization process, and the dose calculation algorithm used was “Superposition.” A few patients with left-sided breast cancer and unfavorable thoracic geometry were treated with seven-field IMRT in order to reduce the high-dose region to the heart [18].

Statistical analysis

Differences between patient groups stratified by the occurrence of treatment interruptions (Table 1) or by the fractionation regimen (Table 3) were assessed using the chi-square test or t test where appropriate. To assess the association of multiple factors with the occurrence of treatment interruptions, a univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed. The factors tested in the logistic regression analysis are listed in Table 2. The model selection of the multivariate analysis was performed by a backward stepwise strategy. All tests were two-sided, and a p value of ≤0.05 was considered significant.

Results

In total, 58 of 286 (20.3%) patients experienced treatment interruptions. The patient, disease, and treatment characteristics of the study population stratified by the occurrence of treatment interruptions are demonstrated in Table 1. As expected, the mean age of the study population was considerably lower compared with reports from Europe or the United States, most likely due to the young age structure of the general population [19].
Table 1
Patient, disease, and treatment characteristics stratified by occurrence of treatment interruptions
Characteristics
 
Total
Treatment interruptions
p
    
Yes
No
 
  
n
%
n
%
n
%
 
Patients
286
100
58
20.3
228
79.7
Country of origin
Middle East
208
72.7
42
72.4
166
72.8
0.18
Asia
42
14.7
7
12.1
35
15.4
Africa
25
8.7
4
6.9
21
9.2
Europe/USA
11
3.8
5
8.6
6
2.6
Age at diagnosis (years)
Mean (SD)
48
(9.6)
48
(8.9)
49
(9.8)
0.65a
Body mass index
<25
47
16.5
12
20.7
35
15.4
0.57
25–29
76
26.7
16
27.6
60
26.4
≥30
162
56.8
30
51.7
132
58.1
Menopausal status
Premenopausal
143
50.0
31
53.4
112
49.1
0.56
Postmenopausal
143
50.0
27
46.6
116
50.9
Marital status
Married
270
94.4
57
98.3
213
93.4
0.15
Single
16
5.6
1
1.7
15
6.6
Financial status
Medical insurance
163
57.0
30
51.7
133
58.3
0.36
Cash
123
43.0
28
48.3
95
41.7
Distance from home to treatment facility (km)
≤50
183
64.0
39
67.2
144
63.2
0.65
51–100
62
21.7
10
17.2
52
22.8
>100
41
14.3
9
15.5
32
14.0
Pathohistology
Invasive ductal cancer
264
92.3
53
91.4
211
92.5
0.83
Invasive lobular cancer
15
5.2
4
6.9
11
4.8
DCIS
5
1.7
1
1.7
4
1.8
Other
2
0.7
0
0.0
2
0.9
Grading
G1
22
7.7
6
10.3
16
7.0
0.31
G2
91
31.8
20
34.5
71
31.1
G3
146
51.0
24
41.4
122
53.5
Not reported
27
9.4
8
13.8
19
8.3
T classification
pTis
6
2.1
2
3.4
4
1.8
0.92
pT0
8
2.8
2
3.4
6
2.6
pT1
98
34.3
22
37.9
76
33.3
pT2
114
39.9
22
37.9
92
40.4
pT3
30
10.5
4
6.9
26
11.4
pT4
20
7.0
4
6.9
16
7.0
Not reported
10
3.5
2
3.4
8
3.5
N classification
pN0
102
35.7
28
48.3
74
32.5
0.20
pN1
84
29.4
13
22.4
71
31.1
pN2
60
21.0
12
20.7
48
21.1
pN3
33
11.5
4
6.9
29
12.7
Not reported
7
2.4
1
1.7
6
2.6
M classification
cM0
282
98.6
58
100.0
224
98.2
0.31
cM1
4
1.4
0
0.0
4
1.8
ER status
Positive
204
71.3
43
74.1
161
70.6
0.62
Negative
71
24.8
14
24.1
57
25.0
Not reported
11
3.8
1
1.7
10
4.4
PR status
Positive
184
64.3
37
63.8
147
64.5
0.89
Negative
86
30.1
17
29.3
69
30.3
Not reported
16
5.6
4
6.9
12
5.3
Her2/neu status
Positive
79
27.6
17
29.3
62
27.2
0.94
Negative
188
65.7
37
63.8
151
66.2
Not reported
19
6.6
4
6.9
15
6.6
Planning target volume (PTV)
Chest wall
150
52.4
27
46.6
123
53.9
0.31
Whole breast
136
47.6
31
53.4
105
46.1
Volume of PTV (cm3)
≤652
71
24.8
9
15.5
62
27.2
0.33
653–872
72
25.2
17
29.3
55
24.1
873–1235
71
24.8
16
27.6
55
24.1
≥1236
72
25.2
16
27.6
56
24.6
Locoregional lymph nodes treated as part of plan
Yes
149
52.1
25
43.1
124
54.4
0.12
No
137
47.9
33
56.9
104
45.6
Boost to the tumor bed
Yes
133
46.5
34
58.6
99
43.4
0.04
No
153
53.5
24
41.4
129
56.6
Radiotherapy technique
TB-IMRT
167
58.4
33
56.9
134
58.8
0.80
3DCRT
119
41.6
25
43.1
94
41.2
Fractionation regimen
CF
146
51.0
39
67.2
107
46.9
0.01
HF
140
49.0
19
32.8
121
53.1
Number of fractions
≤15
86
30.1
11
19.0
75
32.9
0.01
16–20
45
15.7
8
13.8
37
16.2
21–28
70
24.5
11
19.0
59
25.9
≥29
85
29.7
28
48.3
57
25.0
Chemotherapy
Adjuvant
211
73.8
41
70.7
170
74.6
0.58
Neo-adjuvant
61
21.3
15
25.9
46
20.2
No chemotherapy
14
4.9
2
3.4
12
5.3
Hormone therapy
Yes
210
73.4
44
75.9
166
72.8
0.64
No
76
26.6
14
24.1
62
27.2
Fatigue (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
101
35.3
24
41.4
77
33.8
0.51
1
172
60.1
31
53.4
141
61.8
2
13
4.5
3
5.2
10
4.4
Dermatitis radiation (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
11
3.8
2
3.4
9
3.9
0.37
1
228
79.7
42
72.4
186
81.6
2
44
15.4
13
22.4
31
13.6
3
3
1.0
1
1.7
2
0.9
Dysphagia (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
207
72.4
47
81.0
160
70.2
0.26
1
72
25.2
10
17.2
62
27.2
2
7
2.4
1
1.7
6
2.6
Esophagitis (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
265
92.7
51
87.9
214
93.9
0.21
1
20
7.0
7
12.1
13
5.7
2
1
0.3
0
0.0
1
0.4
Cough (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
266
93.0
54
93.1
212
93.0
0.65
1
17
5.9
4
6.9
13
5.7
2
3
1.0
0
0.0
3
1.3
Dyspnea (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
277
96.9
56
96.6
221
96.9
0.83
1
8
2.8
2
3.4
6
2.6
2
1
0.3
0
0.0
1
0.4
p Values using chi-square testing to compare patient subgroups with and without treatment interruptions, except as indicated
DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ, ER estrogen receptor, PR progesterone receptor, TB-IMRT tangential beam intensity-modulated radiotherapy, 3DCRT three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy, CF conventional fractionation, HF hypofractionation, CTCAE Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events
aUnpaired Student’s t test
On univariate analysis, three of 23 tested factors were significantly associated with a higher risk of treatment interruptions (Table 2). All three factors were related to longer treatment courses (CF, number of radiotherapy fractions ≥29, boost to the tumor bed). In total, 19 of 140 (13.6%) patients treated with HF and 39 of 146 (26.7%) treated with CF had treatment interruptions. On multivariate analysis, the only remaining independent significant prognostic factor was the fractionation regimen: CF vs. HF; p = 0.007; odds ratio (95% confidence interval) 2.3 (1.3, 4.2).
Table 2
Univariate logistic regression results for associations with treatment interruptions
Characteristics
 
Odds ratio
Lower 95%CI
Upper 95%CI
p
Country of origin
Middle East
Reference
Asia
1.33
0.43
4.08
0.62
Africa
1.27
0.53
3.05
0.60
Europe/USA
0.30
0.09
1.04
0.06
Age at diagnosis (years)
≤Mean
Reference
>Mean
0.92
0.51
1.64
0.77
Body mass index
<25
Reference
25–29
1.29
0.55
3.03
0.57
≥30
1.51
0.70
3.25
0.29
Menopausal status
Premenopausal
Reference
Postmenopausal
1.19
0.67
2.12
0.56
Marital status
Married
Reference
Single
0.25
0.03
1.93
0.18
Financial status
Medical insurance
Reference
Cash payer
0.77
0.43
1.36
0.36
Commuting distance to treatment facility (km)
≤50
Reference
51–100
1.04
0.46
2.36
0.93
>100
1.46
0.54
3.99
0.46
Planning target volume (PTV)
Chest wall
Reference
Whole breast
0.74
0.42
1.33
0.31
Volume of PTV (cm3)
≤652
Reference
653–872
0.47
0.19
1.14
0.09
873–1235
0.50
0.20
1.22
0.13
≥1236
0.51
0.21
1.24
0.14
Locoregional lymph nodes treated as part of plan
Yes
Reference
No
0.64
0.36
1.14
0.13
Boost to the tumor bed
Yes
Reference
No
1.85
1.03
3.31
0.04
Radiotherapy technique
IMRT
Reference
3DCRT
0.93
0.52
1.66
0.80
Fractionation regimen
CF
Reference
HF
2.32
1.27
4.26
<0.01
Number of radiotherapy fractions
≤15
Reference
16–20
0.68
0.25
1.83
0.44
21–28
0.79
0.32
1.94
0.60
≥29
0.30
0.14
0.65
<0.01
Chemotherapy
Adjuvant
Reference
Neo-adjuvant
0.74
0.38
1.45
0.38
No chemotherapy
1.45
0.31
6.72
0.64
Hormone therapy
Yes
Reference
No
1.25
0.64
2.44
0.51
Fatigue (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
0.74
0.41
1.33
0.31
Dermatitis radiation (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
1.15
0.24
5.48
0.86
Dysphagia (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
0.55
0.27
1.13
0.10
Esophagitis (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
2.10
0.81
5.46
0.13
Cough (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
0.98
0.32
3.06
0.97
Dyspnea (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0
Reference
>0
1.13
0.23
5.58
0.88
Any acute radiation reaction (grade CTCAE v4.0)
0, 1
Reference
2, 3
1.69
0.87
3.28
0.12
CI confidence interval, IMRT intensity-modulated radiotherapy, 3DCRT three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy, CF conventional fractionation, HF hypofractionation, CTCAE Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events
Concerning the reasons for treatment interruptions, no statistically significant differences were detected between the patients treated with CF and HF (Table 3). However, treatment interruptions were on average longer for patients treated with CF (3.2 days vs. 2.3 days; p = 0.02; Table 3).
Table 3
Reason for and length of treatment interruptions stratified by fractionation regimen
Reason for treatment interruptions
Total
Fractionation regimen
p
    
HF
CF
 
  
n
%
n
%
n
%
 
Public holidays
Yes
33
56.9
11
57.9
22
56.4
0.91
No
25
43.1
8
42.1
17
43.6
Days, mean (SD)
1.9
(1.8)
1.6
(1.5)
2.1
(2.0)
0.34a
Patient unwillingness
Yes
23
39.7
8
42.1
15
38.5
0.79
No
35
60.3
11
57.9
24
61.5
Days, mean (SD)
0.6
(0.9)
0.5
(0.7)
0.6
(0.9)
0.80a
Machine breakdown
Yes
8
13.8
1
5.3
7
17.9
0.19
No
50
86.2
18
94.7
32
82.1
Days, mean (SD)
0.3
(0.8)
0.1
(0.2)
0.4
(1.0)
0.16a
Radiation reactions
Yes
4
6.9
0
0
4
10.3
0.15
No
54
93.1
19
100
35
89.7
Days, mean (SD)
0.1
(0.3)
0
(0)
0.1
(0.3)
0.16a
Unspecified
Yes
1
1.7
1
5.3
0
0
0.15
No
57
98.3
18
94.7
39
100
Days, mean (SD)
0.1
(0.4)
0.2
(0.7)
0
(0)
0.15a
Treatment interruptions
Yes
58
20.3
19
13.6
39
26.7
0.01
No
228
79.7
121
86.4
107
73.3
For one reason
47
81.0
17
89.5
30
76.9
0.25
For two reasons
11
19.0
2
10.5
9
23.1
Days, mean (SD)
2.9
(1.4)
2.3
(1.2)
3.2
(1.4)
0.02a
Prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time after compensation for treatment interruptions
0 days
24
41.4
9
47.4
15
38.5
0.68
1 day
15
25.9
6
31.6
9
23.1
2 days
9
15.5
1
5.3
8
20.5
3 days
5
8.6
1
5.3
4
10.3
4 days
3
5.2
1
5.3
2
5.1
5 days
2
3.4
1
5.3
1
2.6
p Values using chi-square testing to compare patient subgroups treated with HF or CF, except as indicated
CF conventional fractionation, HF hypofractionation
aUnpaired Student’s t test
In accordance with our departmental policy, treatment interruptions were compensated by treating the corresponding patients on weekends within the prescribed overall treatment time. After compensation for treatment interruptions, eventually 41.4% of the patients with treatment interruptions completed their treatment within the prescribed overall treatment time, corresponding to 88.1% of the total study population. The remaining patients experienced a prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time of 1–5 days (Table 3).

Discussion

Our study shows that a significant proportion of our patients experienced unintended treatment interruptions (20.3%). The compliance to the prescribed radiotherapy schedule was significantly better with HF than with CF (patients with treatment interruptions; 13.6% vs. 26.7%). The data suggest that the better compliance was basically related to the shorter overall treatment time of HF (3–4 weeks) compared with CF (5–6.5 weeks).
Several randomized trials have shown that HF is equally effective in long-term disease control and late radiation effects compared with CF in adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy [2023]. The main motivation for developing protracted radiotherapy regimens was the benefit to patients and health services in terms of convenience and cost. Recent breast cancer studies suggested that HF is also associated with a significantly lower acute skin reaction rate compared with CF [7, 24, 25]. Our study revealed another advantage of HF over CF: a significantly better patient compliance with the prescribed radiotherapy schedule.
Noncompliance with the prescribed radiotherapy schedule can have multiple deleterious effects. For postoperative radiotherapy of breast cancer, a prolongation of the overall treatment time of more than 1 week has been shown to decrease the 5‑year local control rate by 5% [26]. The management of the increased number of recurrences may place additional burden on the health-care system. Disturbances in the clinical workflow by noncompliant (“no-show”) patients occupying treatment slots on the linear accelerator may indirectly cause treatment delays for other patients and an extension of the work day. Compensation of missed radiotherapy fractions during the working week by additional treatment on weekends will further increase costs in terms of time and effort.
In a large study of 2184 patients receiving radiotherapy with curative intent for various malignancies in an American urban academic cancer center, 20.2% missed multiple radiotherapy fractions, 17.4% a single radiotherapy fraction, and 62.4% no radiotherapy fractions. The median number of missed treatments was 3. Similar to our study, the statistical analysis identified “prescribed longer radiotherapy courses” as a statistically significant independent predictor of noncompliance. The authors suggested that this finding may provide additional rationale for adopting shortened radiotherapy schedules as a means of improving patient adherence to prescribed therapy [27]. Other predictors for noncompliance identified in the previously cited study were “particular cancer diagnoses,” “low socioeconomic status,” and “treatment during winter months.” “Distance from the patients’ home to the radiotherapy facility” [2830] and “patients from households that lost family income” [31] have been reported as predictors of noncompliance with the prescribed radiotherapy schedule by other study groups. It is likely that factors influencing compliance depend to a significant extent on individual circumstances like the location of the radiotherapy facility, infrastructure of the region, and socioeconomic status of the population, and may therefore vary between treatment facilities. However, in our study CF, which was the longer radiotherapy schedule compared with HF, was the only significant predictor of noncompliance on multivariate analysis of 23 factors.
The limitations of our study should be noted. Owing to the relatively limited patient number (n = 286), possible influencing factors may not have reached statistical significance. The socioeconomic and psycho-oncological status of the patients could not be evaluated because of lack of data. Moreover, owing to the retrospective nature of the study, a selection bias of patients treated with HF and CF cannot be excluded with certainty.
Despite all efforts to avoid a prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time by thorough education of the patient and compensation of missed radiotherapy fractions by treatment on weekends, 34 of 286 patients (11.9%) in our study eventually experienced a moderate prolongation of the prescribed overall treatment time of 1–5 days. Data concerning the detrimental effect of treatment interruptions in adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy are scarce. However, a significant decrease in the 5‑year local control rate after treatment interruptions of more than 1 week has been reported [26].

Conclusion

A significant proportion of breast cancer patients in our study experienced treatment interruptions. Compliance with the prescribed radiotherapy schedule was significantly better for patients treated with HF than for those treated with CF. The data suggest that the better compliance is basically related to the shorter overall treatment time of HF (3–4 weeks) compared with CF (5–6.5 weeks). This finding may add to the treatment decision in favor of HF in particular in situations with expected lower compliance with longer radiotherapy schedules.

Compliance with ethical guidelines

Conflict of interest

V. Rudat, A. Nour, M. Hammoud, and S. Abou Ghaida declare that they have no competing interests.

Ethical standards

All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

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Strahlentherapie und Onkologie

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•Übersichten, Originalien, Kasuistiken

•Kommentierte Literatur aus der Radioonkologie, Strahlenbiologie und -physik

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Metadaten
Titel
Better compliance with hypofractionation vs. conventional fractionation in adjuvant breast cancer radiotherapy
Results of a single, institutional, retrospective study
verfasst von
Prof. Dr. med. Volker Rudat
Alaa Nour
Mohamed Hammoud
Salam Abou Ghaida
Publikationsdatum
23.02.2017
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Strahlentherapie und Onkologie / Ausgabe 5/2017
Print ISSN: 0179-7158
Elektronische ISSN: 1439-099X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00066-017-1115-z

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