Local control by radiotherapy: is that all there is?
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* Corresponding author: Silvia C Formenti silvia.formenti@med.nyu.edu
1 Sandra and Edward H. Meyer Professor of Radiation Oncology and Medicine, Department of Radiation Oncology, New York University School of Medicine and NYU Cancer Institute, 160 East 34th Street, New York, NY 10016, USA
2 Department of Pathology, NYU Cancer Institute, New York University School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016, USA
Breast Cancer Research 2008, 10:215 doi:10.1186/bcr2160
Published: 5 November 2008Abstract
Radiotherapy is a local treatment modality employed in breast cancer to reduce local recurrence following surgery. The observed association of optimal local control with improved survival was not expected in a disease characterized by early systemic spread. The underlying mechanisms whereby the application of ionizing radiation to the primary tumor site can have systemic effects remain unclear and are the subject of much debate. In the present article we discuss the hypothesis that radiotherapy has unique biological effects and that, in addition to killing residual neoplastic cells after surgery is performed, it might favorably alter the microenvironment at the primary tumor site during the process of wound healing and the development of antitumor immune responses.