Benefits of Longer-Term
Tamoxifen Use May Take Years to Appear
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
The survival benefits of longer-term therapy using tamoxifen may take at least nine years to develop, according to a new study published in the journal Cancer.
A long-term study evaluating two- versus five-year treatment with tamoxifen in women aged 50 years or older found it took nine years to demonstrate significant survival benefits of the longer-term treatment, and that improvements in survival were observed only in postmenopausal women younger than 55 years and with estrogen receptor (ER) positive tumors. In these patients, prolonging tamoxifen to five years was associated with a 44 percent reduction in the risk of death.
While tamoxifen is the generally accepted as the standard of care for breast cancer after surgery for its demonstrated improvements in survival, the duration of therapy and the length of time to find significant survival improvements remain unclear. Data consistently suggest that longer duration of treatment results in longer disease-free survival. Data conflicts, however, on whether longer treatment results in longer overall survival and whether it takes many years after treatment to see its benefits.
To investigate the effects of duration of treatment and
survival, Maurizio Belfiglio, M.D. and Antonio Nicolucci, M.D. of the Department of Clinical Pharmacology
and Epidemiology at Consorzio Mario Negri Sud in
With median follow-up of 115 months the investigators found that women with ER positive tumors who took tamoxifen for five years started to show significantly improved overall survival 90 months after enrollment. Further analysis showed that only women between 50 and 55 years showed overall survival improvement.
The study demonstrates, the authors
conclude, that "5 years of tamoxifen are
superior to 2 years of treatment in reducing total mortality in ER+ patients 55
years and younger." In older patients, the previously documented benefit
in terms of disease free survival did not translate into a longer overall
survival, probably as a consequence of competing causes of death.
SOURCE:
Cancer,