Long-Term Adjuvant Tamoxifen Urged for Low-Risk Breast Cancer

Publication
Article
Oncology NEWS InternationalOncology NEWS International Vol 7 No 12
Volume 7
Issue 12

FLORENCE, Italy-Long-term follow-up of node-negative postmenopausal breast cancer patients has shown that using tamoxifen (Nolvadex) as an adjunct to breast-conserving surgery and postoperative radiotherapy markedly improves event-free survival in these low-risk women.

FLORENCE, Italy—Long-term follow-up of node-negative postmenopausal breast cancer patients has shown that using tamoxifen (Nolvadex) as an adjunct to breast-conserving surgery and postoperative radiotherapy markedly improves event-free survival in these low-risk women.

“The positive effect of avoiding salvage mastectomies, re-excisions, and contralateral breast surgery justifies the use of tamoxifen even in the low-risk group with an expected 10-year survival rate of 90%,” Kristina Dalberg, MD, of the Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden, said at the First European Breast Cancer Conference. The 432 study subjects comprised a separate stratum of the more than 2,700 women enrolled in the Stockholm Adjuvant Tamoxifen trial. These largely estrogen-receptor (ER)-positive patients were randomized to receive either tamoxifen, 40 mg/day for a mean duration of 3.2 years, or no further treatment, and were monitored for a median follow-up period of 8 years.

Ten-Year Event-Free Survival

Ten-year event-free survival was 80% among women treated with tamoxifen, which was significantly greater than the 70% rate documented among control patients.

This benefit stemmed from a 60% reduction in the relative hazard of invasive or noninvasive ipsilateral breast cancer recurrence and a similar drop in the incidence of contralateral breast tumor development. Dr. Dalberg emphasized that the 3% 10-year rate of ipsilateral recurrence observed among tamoxifen-treated enrollees in the Stockholm study is one of the lowest reported to date.

Although there were trends suggesting a protective effect of tamoxifen against distant metastases and death due to breast cancer, the benefits failed to reach statistical significance.

The study investigators detected six cases of endometrial cancer among tam-oxifen-treated women and two cases in control patients.

The Stockholm results raise the question of whether low-risk women with node-negative, ER-positive breast cancer might be successfully managed with tamoxifen instead of—rather than in addition to—adjuvant radiotherapy.

Recent Videos
Breast cancer care providers make it a goal to manage the adverse effects that patients with breast cancer experience to minimize the burden of treatment.
Social workers and case managers may have access to institutional- or hospital-level grants that can reduce financial toxicity for patients undergoing cancer therapy.
Insurance and distance to a tertiary cancer center were 2 barriers to receiving high-quality breast cancer care, according to Rachel Greenup, MD, MPH.
Antibody-drug conjugates are effective, but strategies such as better understanding the mechanisms of action may lead to enhanced care for patients with cancer. Antibody-drug conjugates are effective, but strategies such as better understanding the mechanisms of action may lead to enhanced care for patients with cancer.
ADCs demonstrate superior efficacy vs chemotherapy but maintain a similar efficacy profile that requires multidisciplinary collaboration to optimally treat.
According to Aditya Bardia, MD, MPH, FASCO, antibody-drug conjugates are slowly replacing chemotherapy as a standard treatment for breast cancer.
Administering oral SERD-based regimens may enhance patients’ quality of life when undergoing treatment for ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer.
Gedatolisib-based triplet regimens may be effective among patients with prior endocrine resistance or rapid progression following frontline therapy.
Leading experts in the breast cancer field highlight the use of CDK4/6 inhibitors, antibody-drug conjugates, and other treatment modalities.
Related Content