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Scapula alata in early breast cancer patients enrolled in a randomized clinical trial of post-surgery short-course image-guided radiotherapy

Abstract

Background

Scapula alata (SA) is a known complication of breast surgery associated with palsy of the serratus anterior, but it is seldom mentioned. We evaluated the risk factors associated with SA and the relationship of SA with ipsilateral shoulder/arm morbidity in a series of patients enrolled in a trial of post-surgery radiotherapy (RT).

Methods

The trial randomized women with completely resected stage I-II breast cancer to short-course image-guided RT, versus conventional RT. SA, arm volume and shoulder-arm mobility were measured prior to RT and at one to three months post-RT. Shoulder/arm morbidities were computed as a post-RT percentage change relative to pre-RT measurements.

Results

Of 119 evaluable patients, 13 (= 10.9%) had pre-RT SA. Age younger than 50 years old, a body mass index less than 25 kg/m2, and axillary lymph node dissection were significant risk factors, with odds ratios of 4.8 (P = 0.009), 6.1 (P = 0.016), and 6.1 (P = 0.005), respectively. Randomization group was not significant. At one to three months’ post-RT, mean arm volume increased by 4.1% (P = 0.036) and abduction decreased by 8.6% (P = 0.046) among SA patients, but not among non-SA patients. SA resolved in eight, persisted in five, and appeared in one patient.

Conclusion

The relationship of SA with lower body mass index suggests that SA might have been underestimated in overweight patients. Despite apparent resolution of SA in most patients, pre-RT SA portended an increased risk of shoulder/arm morbidity. We argue that SA warrants further investigation. Incidentally, the observation of SA occurring after RT in one patient represents the second case of post-RT SA reported in the literature.

Background

Scapula alata (SA), also called scapular winging, winged scapula or alar scapula, is a condition in which the medial border and angulus inferior of the scapula protrudes prominently from the thorax [1]. It can arise from numerous pathologic processes, which lead to a deficiency of the muscles that play a role in pulling the scapula towards the thoracic wall -serratus anterior, trapezius (pars descendens), and rhomboids - such as by injury of the long thoracic nerve (the most common cause), the spinal accessory nerve and the dorsal scapular nerve respectively [2]. The condition can be distressful and debilitating [3]. Depending on the underlying causes, the compensatory muscular activity required to improve shoulder stability can be associated with secondary pain and spasm due to muscle imbalances or tendinitis around the shoulder joint [4].

SA associated with serratus anterior palsy is a known complication of breast and axillary surgery. In 1825, Velpeau cautioned that any axillary operation should be carefully carried out to avoid damaging the long thoracic nerve. He described that symptoms of damage would be a displacement of the scapula backwards and upwards and the inability of the scapula to come into close apposition with the thorax [5] (page 303). Yet despite the long-known history, SA has seldom been investigated in breast cancer research, in contrast with other domains, such as sports medicine. There are considerably large variations in the reported incidence of SA after breast surgery, ranging from 0% to 74.7% [610], without clear explanation of the variability.

Our institution conducted, from 2007 to 2011, the TomoBreast randomized clinical trial which compared post-operative short-course image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) with conventional radiotherapy (conventional RT) for early breast cancer. SA was not a specified endpoint of the trial. Nevertheless, it was systematically assessed in patients enrolled in the trial. We believe that an analysis of the trial’s data might provide new insight into the clinical significance of SA. In the present study, our aims are to evaluate the incidence of SA among the patients who participated in the trial, to identify patients’ characteristics associated with SA, and to evaluate the relationship of SA with physical measurements of arm volume and shoulder-arm mobility.

Methods

Selection of patients

The study population consisted of women who participated in the TomoBreast clinical trial (NCT00459628, ISRCTN21164902) approved by the University Hospital of Brussels’ ethics board. The trial recruited women aged 18 years or older, presenting with a primary breast carcinoma completely removed by mastectomy or by breast-conserving surgery, pathological stage pT1-3N0M0 or pT1-2N1M0 with pathological nodal status assessed by axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) or by sentinel nodes biopsy (SNB), who were to receive post-surgery radiotherapy. Women who gave written informed consent were allocated to either a control group or to an experimental group by computer randomization. In order to reduce the risk of imbalance due to the small size of the trial, randomization used Efron’s biased coin design: instead of a fixed 1/2 probability, the probability of a new patient being allocated to the control or to the experimental group was assigned as 1/3, as 1/2, or as 2/3, depending on how many preceding patients, stratified by nodal status, type of surgery, and chemotherapy sequence, had been previously allocated in one or the other group [11]. In the control group, a dose of 50 Gy was delivered in 25 fractions over five weeks to the chest wall using tangential photon fields, and in cases of pN1 status, to the supraclavicular, infraclavicular and axillary nodes using an anterior field matched to the tangential fields. Breast-conserved patients received, in addition, a sequential boost of 16 Gy delivered in 8 fractions over two weeks to the initial tumor bed using a direct electron field. In the experimental group, a dose of 42 Gy was delivered in 15 fractions over three weeks to the chest wall in cases of mastectomy, or to the whole breast in cases of breast-conserving surgery, and to the supraclavicular, infraclavicular and axillary nodes in cases of pN1 status, using the image-guided radiotherapy system TomoTherapy (TomoTherapy Inc., Madison, WI, USA). Breast-conserved patients received a simultaneous integrated boost of 9 Gy delivered in 15 fractions over the three weeks.

Per protocol, radiotherapy had to start within six weeks of breast surgery, or, in case of adjuvant chemotherapy, within six weeks after completion of the adjuvant chemotherapy. Quality of life, arm mobility and volume, pulmonary function and heart function tests were scheduled prior to radiotherapy, at one to three months after completion of radiotherapy, then yearly. The primary endpoint of the trial was the combined pulmonary and cardiac toxicities as determined by medical imaging and functional tests during follow-up versus pre-treatment evaluation. The secondary endpoint was locoregional recurrence. Formal comparisons of the endpoints and quality of life between treatment groups are ongoing but are not the purpose of the present study. The focus of the study is scapula alata and the physical therapy assessment made prior to radiotherapy and at the first follow-up one to three months after radiotherapy.

Written informed consent was obtained from the patients for publication of this report and any accompanying images.

Physical therapy assessment

Patient’s subjective arm symptoms, physical shoulder-arm evaluation, and presence or not of scapula alata were assessed by a physical therapist after the patient’s consent to participate in the trial but before radiotherapy (pre-RT evaluation) and at one to three months after the last radiotherapy session.

Subjective arm symptoms were recorded as present or absent. Arm symptoms were considered present when the patient reported for the operated arm/hand any symptom of dysesthesia, heaviness, swelling, fatigue, more effort needed, warmth, burning or pain. Arm symptoms were considered absent when the patient reported none of these symptoms.

Shoulder-arm evaluation recorded the following measurements (Figure 1):

Arm volume, computed from circumferential measurements using the mean of the frustum sign and the cylinder model method as detailed in Appendix 1 of Additional file 1 [12].

Maximum range of active lateral elevation of the arm (abduction).

Maximum range of active forward elevation of the arm (anteflexion).

Maximum range of active backward elevation of the arm (retroflexion).

Maximal functional endorotation measured by counting the vertebrae between C7 and the most cranial vertebra the patient could reach with her thumb on her back.

Scapular distance (the lateral scapular slide test), measured as the distance between the spine and the angulus inferior of the scapula, with the arms elevated 90° in the scapular plane [13].

Figure 1
figure 1

Physical measurements. Measured at five locations (marked with a dermographic pencil but not visible in the picture). The tape box has a push button to maintain the same tension. Abduction: running angle by lateral elevation, measured between the midline of the hemibody (goniometer’s arm in line with the ipsilateral posterior superior iliac spine), and the midline of the upper arm (goniometer’s arm in line with the lateral epicondyle of the humerus). Retroflexion: running angle by posterior elevation, measured between the midline of the body (goniometer’s arm in line downward with the trochanter major), and the midline of the upper arm (goniometer’s arm in line with the lateral epicondyle of the humerus). Anteflexion: running angle by anterior elevation, measured between the midline of the body (goniometer’s arm in line downward with the trochanter major), and the midline of the upper arm (goniometer’s arm in line with the lateral epicondyle of the humerus). Endorotation: the thumb as close as possible to C7. The number of vertebrae between C7 and the vertebra that can be reached with the thumb is marked as endorotation measurement. Scapular distance: with the patient’s arms held actively at 90° anteflexion, the distance of the scapula inferior angle to the spine, perpendicularly to the spine, is measured with a tape.

Note that impairment of arm mobility is indicated by decreased abduction, anteflexion, and/or retroflexion. However, impairment of endorotation would be marked by the inability of the hand on the back to reach closer to the neck, with consequently an increased count of vertebrae. Likewise, shoulder injury might entail decreased ability of the scapula to slide toward the spine, with consequently an increased scapular distance [14, 15]. All measurements were made on both arms, ipsilaterally and contralaterally to the operated side. For the present study, we took into consideration only measurements pertaining to the ipsilateral arm.

Scapula alata was assessed through visual observation of tilting and winging of the scapulae (Figure 2). The observation was performed with the subject instructed to stand relaxed and perform active elevation of the arms in the scapular plane until shoulder height. No differentiation in the amount of elevation was specified. The patient was observed from dorsal (frontal plane) and lateral (sagittal plane). Normally, the inferior angle should be flat against the chest wall [16] and the scapulae should be 30° internally rotated with respect to the frontal plane [17]. Scapular positioning was deemed impaired when:

the inferior angle of the scapula became prominent dorsally (rotating about the horizontal axis - tilting;

the entire medial border of the scapula became prominent dorsally (rotation about the vertical axis - winging.

Figure 2
figure 2

Scapular winging. Scapula alata assessed in TomoBreast patients. (A) Patient 1 pre-RT arms relaxed, (B) Patient 1 pre-RT arms elevated, (C) Patient 2 pre-RT arms relaxed, (D) Patient 2 pre-RT arms elevated, (E) Patient 2 post-RT arms relaxed, (F) Patient 2 post-RT arms elevated, (G) Patient 3 pre-RT arms relaxed and (H) Patient 3 pre-RT arms elevated.

If one or both criteria listed above were fulfilled, we scored scapula alata as 1 (SA present), only if there was a clear observation of the positioning fault. If none of the criteria were met, we judged scapula alata as 0 (no SA). Each position was observed and evaluated once.

Statistical analyses

In order to evaluate shoulder/arm morbidity on a common scale and to avoid reliance on the contralateral arm measurements, we computed the outcome of a shoulder/arm measurement as the percentage change of the measurement that occurred over time, between pre-RT assessment (= time T0) and post-RT assessment (= time T1) of the ipsilateral arm. That is, for volume, the percent change of volume was computed as: 100 x (volume of arm at T1 – volume of arm at T0)/volume of arm at T0. Likewise, for abduction, the percentage change of abduction was computed as 100 x (abduction at T1 – abduction at T0)/abduction at T0, and so on for retroflexion, anteflexion, endorotation, and scapular distance. The percentage changes of the measurements were analyzed as continuous variables, and were also analyzed as categorized variables. Categorization used cutoffs for limb edema and for motion impairment derived from the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 4.0 (CTCAE 4.03) [18]. For arm swelling, the cutoffs applied were Grade 0 = less than 5%, Grade 1 = 5% to less than 10%, Grade 2 = 10% to less than 30%, and Grade 3 = 30% or more increase of arm volume, where percentage increases are computed as defined above, in order to avoid reliance on the contralateral limb [19]. For loss of range of motion, the cutoffs applied were Grade 0 = 5% or less, Grade 1 = more than 5% to 25%, Grade 2 = more than 25% to 50%, and Grade 3 = more than 50% loss of motion. CTCAE 4.03 does not specify a lower bound in the definition of Grade 1 toxicity. We implemented a lower bound of 5% in order to take into account the normal variability of range of motion [2025].

Fisher’s exact test was used for the analysis of data categorized in contingency tables [26]. Cochran-Armitage’s trend test was used for ordinal tables [27] (pp 504-509). Odds ratio relating SA with patients’ characteristics were computed by conditional maximum likelihood. Logistic regression was used to evaluate the multivariate association of patients’ characteristics with SA. Significance testing of continuous measurements used Student’s t-test. P-values from one-sided or two-sided tests are indicated as 1P or 2P, respectively. The overall assessment of multiple outcomes used Brown’s method to combine non-independent tests of significance [28].

All statistical computations used R version 2.14.1 [29]. Missing data were imputed using the method of multivariate imputation by chained equations from package ‘mice’ [30]. Variables used for imputation are listed in Appendix 2 of Additional file 1. Fisher’s exact test and odds ratios were computed using the function ‘fisher.test’. Ordinal test of proportions used the function ‘prop.trend.test’. Logistic regression used the function ‘glm’ [31]. Brown’s method for combining non-independent tests of significance [28] was computed using an in-house R script (Additional file 2).

Results

The TomoBreast trial was opened to accrual on 1 May 2007, and closed accrual on 31 August 2011. A total of 123 women consented to participate, two of whom were ineligible, one presented bilateral breast cancer, the other retracted participation. Of the 121 eligible patients, two had no follow-up physical examination, leaving 119 patients available for analysis. Missing data were pre-RT arms symptoms not recorded in eleven patients, and the side of the dominant arm not recorded in one patient (Table 1). One patient was in a wheelchair at the pre-RT assessment, so retroflexion of both arms could not be measured and were assigned as missing. One patient had long-standing contralateral arm paralysis, but this did not affect the present analyses, which did not rely on contralateral arm measurements.

Table 1 Patients’ characteristics

The mean time between breast surgery and the pre-RT physical therapy assessment was 50.5 days (median 38, range 17 to 204). The mean time between pre-RT assessment and start of radiotherapy was 6.2 days (median 6, range 15 to 27), that is, 6 patients had their “pre-RT” assessment delayed to 1, 4, 5, 6, 8, and 15 days after the start of radiotherapy. The mean RT duration was 33 days (median 32, range 18 to 54). The mean time between pre-RT assessment and post-RT assessment was 108.6 days (median 105, range 68 to 235).

The incidence of SA observed at a mean of 50.5 days after surgery but prior to radiotherapy was 10.9% (= 13 of 119). At 1 to 3 months after finishing radiotherapy, which corresponded to a mean time interval of 108.6 days after the pre-RT assessment, SA resolved in 61.5% (= 8 of 13) patients, but persisted in the other 38.5% (= 5 of 13). Moreover, SA appeared after radiotherapy in 1 patient who had no SA at the pre-RT assessment, bringing the post-RT incidence to 5.0% (= 5 + 1 of 119).

Patients’ characteristics are summarized in Table 1. The majority of patients were older than 50 years, with a mean age of 56.6 years (range 32 to 81). Mean pre-RT weight was 68.4 kg (range 42 to 150) and mean height was 1.62 m (range 1.40 to 1.83), resulting in a mean pre-RT BMI of 25.9 kg/m2 (range 17.3 to 51.3). The mean number of lymph nodes examined was 8.2 (range 1 to 35). Taking into account the type of axillary surgery, the mean and range of number of examined nodes were 2.9 (1 to 7) by sentinel node biopsy, and 16.3 (3 to 35) by axillary dissection.

Factors significantly associated with pre-RT SA were age, body mass index, and axillary dissection (Table 1): pre-RT SA was observed in about 1 of 4 patients younger than 50 years old, in 1 of 5 patients with body mass index less than 25 kg/m2, and in 1 of 5 patients who had axillary dissection. The univariate odds ratios were 4.8, 6.1, and 6.1, respectively. Younger age, lower body mass index, and axillary dissection remained significant factors associated with pre-RT SA in a trimmed multivariate logistic regression (Table 2), as well as in a full model (Appendix 4 in Additional file 1). Figure 3 displays graphically the percentage changes from pre-RT to post-RT, for each of the shoulder/arm assessments, according to patients’ pre-RT SA status. The top row shows outcomes of patient without pre-RT SA, and the bottom row shows the outcomes of patients who presented with pre-RT SA. The histograms show that patients with pre-RT SA presented an increase in arm volume (distribution of bars and density curve shift to >0%), a decrease of abduction (shift to <0%), a decrease of retroflexion (shift to <0%), a small decrease of anteflexion (secondary peak <0%), a decrease of endorotation (shift to <0%), and both increase and decrease of scapular distance (shift to both negative and positive change).

Table 2 Multivariate association of patients’ characteristics with pre-radiotherapy scapula alata
Figure 3
figure 3

Histograms of shoulder/arm percent changes, according to scapula alata status. Curves, continuous density estimates; SA, scapula alata status pre-radiotherapy, Y-axis, relative frequency density.

Table 3 summarizes the percentage changes of the measurements that were observed after RT and the corresponding significance tests, according to pre-RT SA status. Measurements were complete, except retroflexion which was imputed in one patient. There were no notable changes of the measurements between pre-RT and post-RT assessments among the non-SA patients, except scapular distance that increased by 3.1%. The overall combined test for non-SA patients was not significant, one-sided P = 0.148. Among SA patients, arm volume significantly increased by 4.1%, 1P = 0.036, and arm abduction decreased significantly by 8.6%, 1P = 0.046 (Table 2). There was also a trend toward decreased retroflexion of 7.0% and increased scapular distance of 19.5% among SA patients. The overall combined test for SA patients reached significance, 1P = 0.043. The percentage changes are shown as categorized toxicity grades in Table 4 and Figure 4. Whereas the previous Table 3 evaluated how physical measurements changed over time according to SA status, Table 4 directly compares the changes between the two SA groups of patients. Patients with pre-RT SA presented with more Grade 1 to 3 toxicity by arm volume, abduction, retroflexion, and scapular distance, but comparable endorotation toxicity, and less anteflexion toxicity. Figure 4 displays that patients with pre-RT SA experienced comparatively more frequent toxicities than patients without pre-RT SA, in four out of the six physical assessments (fewer Grade 0, represented as light blue bars), and more frequently with higher grades of toxicities (more Grade 2 and 3, represented as red and black bars).

Table 3 Ipsilateral shoulder-arm measurements before and after radiotherapy (RT), according to scapula alata status
Table 4 Ipsilateral shoulder/arm toxicity according to pre-radiotherapy scapula alata status (SA pre-RT)
Figure 4
figure 4

Toxicity grades according to scapula alata status. SA, scapula alata pre-radiotherapy status, 0 = absent, 1 = present.

Discussion

The present study found a non-negligible incidence of SA in 13 of 119 patients (10.9%) at a mean time interval of 7 weeks (50.5 days) after surgery. Recovery was observed in 8 of the 13 patients 16 weeks (108.6 days) later, in keeping with other observations. Lotze et al. reported that serratus anterior palsy occurred in 30% of patients undergoing axillary dissection immediately after surgery, but returned to normal in all patients up to 6 months after the intervention [6]. de Oliveira et al. reported that the post-operative incidence of SA was 73.3% immediately after axillary lymphadenectomy, 65.6% after 90 days and 27.7% at the end of follow-up (416 days) [9]. Meininger et al. reported that most cases of SA resolved within six to nine months [32]. In Martin and Fish’s review, most cases of isolated serratus anterior palsy resolved with conservative treatment within one to twenty-four months [2].

In line with other authors who compared the SA incidence according to ALND or SNB [4], ALND was one of the most significant risk factor of SA, with SA observed in 10 of 47 (21.3%) ALND patients, as compared with 3 of 72 (4.2%) SNB patients (Table 1). Even though the long thoracic nerve is identified and preserved during axillary dissection [3336], a higher risk of damage than with sentinel nodes biopsy can be expected to occur. We note that using a logistic regression model that includes age, body mass index, and ALND (Table 2), the expected risk of SA would range from 0.4% in the lowest risk group (older overweight patients treated with SNB), to 63% in the highest risk group (younger leaner patients treated with ALND). This suggests that the variability of SA incidence might be explained, at least in part, by the heterogeneity of populations.

The relationship of lean body weight with increased risk of SA, or conversely the apparent decreased risk of SA with large body weight, is intriguing. We searched the literature on scapular winging of all causes, but found no direct mention of any relationship between SA and weight or BMI. However, in 25 papers that we found reporting pictures of patients, counting multiple photographs of the same patient as only one to avoid duplicated counting, we identified 47 distinct cases: all were lean or average body frame patients, there was no photograph of any overweight case [1, 2, 10, 32, 3757]. The published cases lend support to our observation that weight is inversely related with SA. A tentative explanation is that lean patients might be more at risk of nerve and muscle injury than overweight patients, as there would be less axillary room and fat to move around to spare the long thoracic nerve, and a higher risk of indirect damage by vascular disruption, scarring, or compression against the chest wall. An alternative plausible explanation is that SA is more readily overlooked in overweight patients, in whom positional changes of the scapula would be masked by the overlying adipose tissues. If that is the case, then the true incidence of SA might have been underestimated. We note that in our one patient who had onset of post-RT SA, we found no hint to attribute SA to surgery or to radiotherapy. She was 45 years old, had breast-conserving surgery, sentinel nodes biopsy without ALND, irradiation to the breast without regional node irradiation. But, between the pre-RT assessment and the post-RT assessment, she experienced a weight loss of 10 kg, from a pre-RT weight of 67 kg, her BMI dropped from 24.9 kg/m2 before radiotherapy, to 21.2 kg/m2 thereafter. Incidentally, we found only one case report of SA occurring early after radiotherapy [40]. Our patient would represent the second case so reported to the literature.

Our analyses found that younger age was a significant risk factor for SA. The literature provides scarce and contradictory data regarding age and the incidence of SA after breast cancer surgery. In Pereira et al.’s series of patients, the mean age was 60.3 years, but the relationship of SA with age was not investigated [58]. Contrarily to our observation, Ribeiro et al. reported in an abstract that age >60 years by logistic regression was associated with an increased SA relative risk of 3.14 [59]. Crude figures were not provided, hence the consistency of Ribeiro et al.’s logistic regression with data could not be ascertained, whereas our logistic regression was concordant with our raw data. de Oliveira et al. found no significant association of SA with age or any other characteristic [9]. However, in de Oliveira et al.’s report, at mean follow-up of 416 days, the relative risk of SA for age >65 vs. age <65 years was 0.53 (95% CI 0.26-1.07), P = 0.06, concordantly with our results. There is no obvious explanation why young age would be a risk factor. We can only remark that outside the context of breast cancer, reports of conditions related to scapular winging appear with regard to young and active patients [49, 51]. The largest case series of serratus anterior paralysis reported for 197 patients with a mean age of 31.6 years [60]. The literature that we browsed in the discussion about weight was also striking by the preponderance of young patients close to that age.

Regarding the relationship of SA with shoulder/arm morbidity, we encountered two particular issues. One issue is contralateral shoulder/arm morbidity, which we recently found was correlated with ipsilateral morbidity [19]. The other issue was the different measurement scales using different units. We implemented the percentage change of measurement that occurred over time on the ipsilateral limb, therefore avoiding the need to rely on measurements of the contralateral limb, providing the same scale to the measurements, and further allowing links with the common terminology criteria for adverse events [18].

Some discrepancies could be noted in the relationship between SA and shoulder/arm morbidities, such as improved anteflexion and improved endorotation, albeit non-significant (Table 3). Yet, the overall results indicate that SA might be an important early indicator of higher risk of shoulder/arm morbidity. As shown in Table 3 and Figure 3, patients with SA prior to RT (that is, on average seven weeks after surgery) presented more frequently with altered shoulder/arm assessment. Interestingly, the Brown’s combined test which takes into account the correlation between outcomes was significant. This matches the clinical interpretation of shoulder/arm assessments: while each measurement considered separately might show only small alterations, taken all together the measurements might indicate more substantial risk of morbidity, notably lymphedema or loss of motion (Table 4 and Figure 4).

We are aware of the limitations of the present study. No physical assessment was done prior to surgery, precluding the possibility of analyzing the impact of pre-existing morbidities. The number of patients was small, which did not allow comprehensive analyses, modeling gave results difficult to interpret (Appendix 6 in Additional file 1), therefore limiting the scope of the present study to a descriptive stance. The follow-up was short. Though SA appeared as a predictor of early shoulder/arm toxicities, its value as a predictor of long-term toxicities remains unknown. We did not assess compliance of patients with preventive physical therapy. We did not assess the reproducibility of measurements. It has been argued there is no consistent evidence that any examination procedure used in shoulder assessments has acceptable levels of reliability [61]. Contrariwise, assessment of scapular positioning and winging has been reported to be reliable [62, 63]. In order to evaluate inter-observer variability, the present study could have benefited from repeated assessment by different observers. This was not built into the trial’s design in view of the trial’s time constraints and examinations that patients underwent. Until the present study, we had no a priori reason to give precedence to SA assessment. The study could also have benefited from advanced scapular motion tracking and from electromyographic confirmation of serratus palsy [64]. But, for the same reason that multi-observer assessments were not done, there was no a priori indication to perform motion tracking or electromyography.

The strengths of the study are its prospective nature, the patients were consistently evaluated clinically by the same team within the same institution throughout the study duration. Good internal consistency of measurements done by the same observer could be expected [13, 62]. The physical therapy assessment was blinded to patients’ randomization allocation. Furthermore, the assessors were not involved in the physical therapeutic management of the patients. We have mentioned as a limitation that compliance was not assessed. Yet, this concurred to strengthen the study against bias that could have resulted from knowing patients’ treatments. We believe that the results are robust and warrant further investigations.

Conclusion

In this study, we analyzed the change of SA incidence after post-surgery radiotherapy for breast cancer and the physical functioning factors related with SA. The results confirm the previously known association of SA with ALND. We found an inverse association of SA with age and body weight, not previously reported in the literature, the latter suggesting that SA might have been underestimated. Post-surgery SA appeared to recover in a majority of patients at 15 weeks of follow-up. However, we also found that despite the recovery, SA portended an increased risk of loss of shoulder-arm mobility.

We argue that scapular winging is not an innocuous sign, that it should be actively evaluated in order to identify patients who might be most at need of close physical therapy management.

Abbreviations

ALND:

Axillary lymph node dissection

IGRT:

Image-guided radiotherapy

RT:

Radiotherapy

SA:

Scapula alata

SNB:

Sentinel nodes biopsy.

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Acknowledgements

We gratefully acknowledge Eva Swinnen who helped with the study design and with the physical evaluation of the first study patients. We are grateful to all patients who participated in the trial.

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Correspondence to Vincent Vinh-Hung.

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Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests. The first author (NA) is a bursary of the IWT, Belgian Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology, http://www.iwt.be/. The trial was funded by grant SCIE2006-30 from the Stichting tegen Kanker, Belgian Foundation against Cancer, http://www.kanker.be/. The Radiotherapy Department of the University Hospital, Brussels had a research agreement with TomoTherapy Inc. (Madison, WI, USA) and Orfit Industries (Wijnegem, Belgium). None of the funding agencies were involved in the study design; in the collection, analysis and interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

Authors’ contributions

NA was the trial's co-investigator, designed the study, collected and analysed the data, and drafted the manuscript. MDR was the trial's director, edited and critically reviewed the manuscript. PL, MVo, and GS edited and critically reviewed the manuscript. HVP was the trial's co-investigator, collected the data, and drafted the manuscript. MVa collected the data, ensured patients’ follow-up, and edited the manuscript. GM collected data, evaluated patients, edited and critically reviewed the manuscript. HV did the data management, and drafted the manuscript. JL contributed to patients’ follow-up, edited and reviewed the manuscript. SP contributed to data collection and to manuscript writing. VVH was the trial's principal investigator, provided the study concept, analysed the data analysis, and wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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12957_2011_1072_MOESM1_ESM.doc

Additional file 1: Appendix 1. Computing volume from circumference measurements for TomoBreast patients: Appendix 2. A list of variables used for imputation of missing data; Appendix 3. The relationships between scapula alata and characteristics; Appendix 4. Logistic regression, all variables without selection; Appendix 5. Figure of shoulder/arm percentage changes from pre- to post-radiotherapy, according to scapula alata status; Appendix 6: Post-radiotherapy outcomes (percentage change of shoulder/arm measurement between pre- and post-RT) and linear predictors. (DOC 169 KB)

Additional file 2: File format PDF. Brown.combined.Pvalues. (PDF 7 KB)

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Adriaenssens, N., De Ridder, M., Lievens, P. et al. Scapula alata in early breast cancer patients enrolled in a randomized clinical trial of post-surgery short-course image-guided radiotherapy. World J Surg Onc 10, 86 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7819-10-86

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