SABR in oligometastatic breast cancer: Current status and
future directions
by Rachel Stewart, Michelle White, Jennifer Tan, Shankar
Siva, Lama Karroum, Steven David
The Breast: REVIEW ARTICLE| VOLUME
60, P223-229, DECEMBER 01, 2021
Oligometastatic breast cancer (OMBC) is a heterogeneous
disease with intrinsic biological diversity. It is increasingly accepted in
clinical practice that patients with OMBC could be treated with the expectation
of long-term disease remission. Local ablative treatments, such as radiotherapy
or surgery have a role in this setting. At present, patients that may benefit
are characterised by low tumour burden, long disease-free interval and the
capacity to completely ablate all sites of disease. In the future, biological
or genomic classifiers may help predict which patients may benefit the most
from local ablative treatments. This review provides an overview of the
proposed classifications of oligometastatic disease and outlines the standard
systemic treatment options of endocrine therapy, chemotherapy, and
immunotherapy. The evidence for localized treatment with stereotactic ablative
body radiotherapy (SABR) is presented. We discuss current active trials in
oligometastatic cancer and discuss potential future directions for the use of
SABR in the treatment of OMBC.