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Just 2 Years of Tamoxifen Ups Breast Cancer Survival

May 22, 2016

On Thursday, I met with my oncologist Dr David Mintzer at Pennsylvania Hospital for my 4th year check up. He told me there is a symposium coming up in June which will present data for continuing Tamoxifen for 10 years! We will discuss it next year which will be my 5 year mark. Interesting to find this article online which says even 2 years helps survival. It does not suggest skipping the 5 or 10 year protocol if you can take the side effects but, if not, even two years is beneficial.

For premenopausal women with estrogen receptor (ER)-positive breast cancer, 2 years of adjuvant tamoxifen is enough to confer a long-term survival benefit, according to a Swedish study with more than 25 years of follow-up.

The study, by Maria Ekholm, MD, from Lund University in Sweden, and colleagues, was published online May 9 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The finding is not surprising, said Hatem Soliman, MD, from the Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, who was not involved in the study.

Dr Hatem Soliman

“It has been known for quite some time, and previous data have shown that even someone who delays starting their tamoxifen, say a year or two out, still derives benefit,” he told Medscape Medical News.

The South Swedish and South-East Swedish Breast Cancer Groups conducted the randomized phase 3 SBII-2pre trial from 1984 to 1991. Of the 564 premenopausal patients with primary breast cancer, 276 were randomly assigned to 2 years of adjuvant tamoxifen and 288 were assigned to no systemic treatment.

In addition, in the Adjuvant Tamoxifen: Longer Against Shorter (ATLAS) trial, which randomly assigned patients without recurrence after 5 years of tamoxifen to continue tamoxifen for another 5 years or to receive no further treatment, the absolute beneficial effect on breast cancer mortality was 0.2% at year 10 and 2.8% at year 15 (Lancet. 2013;381:805-816).

And results from the Adjuvant Tamoxifen – To Offer More? (aTTom) trial were similar (J Clin Oncol. 2013;31[suppl]:abstr 5), Dr Ekholm and her colleagues note.

More on the Carryover Effect

In their study, Dr Ekholm’s team also saw the carryover effect on mortality.

The reserachers obtained data on date and cause of death from the Swedish Cause of Death Register, so were able to look at cumulative mortality and cumulative breast-cancer-related mortality.

For the 250 patients still alive in April 2014, median follow-up was 26.3 years (range, 22.7 – 29.7 years). Of the 314 deaths, 262 were deemed to be related to breast cancer.

In the 362 patients with ER-positive tumors, tamoxifen was associated with a marginal reduction in mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 0.77; 95% CI, 0.58 – 1.03; P = .075) and a significant reduction in breast-cancer-related mortality (HR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.53 – 0.99; P = .046).

In the 332 patients with ER-positive, PR-positive tumors, a significant beneficial effect was also seen. For cumulative mortality, the hazard ratio was 0.73 (95% CI, 0.54 – 0.98; P = .034), and for breast-cancer-related mortality, it was 0.70 (95% CI, 0.51 – 0.97; P = .30).

However, in the 153 patients with ER-negative, PR-negative tumors, no such beneficial mortality effects were seen.

Patients with ER-positive tumors who were younger than 40 years derived the most benefit from tamoxifen. For those patients, the hazard ratio for cumulative mortality was 0.45 (95% CI, 0.23 – 0.91), whereas for patients 40 years and older, it was 0.89 (95% CI, 0.65 – 1.23; interaction P = .061).

Results were similar for cumulative breast cancer-related mortality. For patients younger than 40 years, the hazard ratio was 0.37 (95% CI, 0.17 – 0.82), whereas for patients 40 years and older, it was 0.87 (95% CI, 0.61 – 1.22; interaction P = .044).

The researchers assessed the effect of tamoxifen at three different time periods in patients with ER-positive tumors: years 0 to 5, years 5 to 15, and beyond 15 years.

The hazard ratios for mortality and breast-cancer-related mortality increased to a peak at 6 years in both the tamoxifen and control groups, but declined thereafter.

Dr Mateusz Opyrchal

The data from this trial reflect data from other studies looking into adjuvant endocrine treatments, said Mateusz Opyrchal, MD, PhD, from the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, New York.

“Interestingly, we continue to see the effect of treatment even after 15 years of follow-up, demonstrating the difficulty in treating and studying breast cancer, as disease recurrence can happen many years and even decades after the initial diagnosis,” he told Medscape Medical News.

The researchers showed “that even shorter treatment with endocrine therapy is better than no treatment at all,” he pointed out. “These results will not affect the current guidelines, which recommend 5 to 10 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy, but they might help patients and their oncologists make informed decisions for women with relatively low-risk cancers who have intolerable toxicities from their endocrine therapies,” he said.

That just 2 years of tamoxifen shows a survival benefit “speaks quite a bit to the ability of tamoxifen to reduce breast-cancer-specific mortality,” noted Dr Soliman.

“The impact of these data right now is that we can probably counsel our patients that some tamoxifen is better than nothing, even if they are not able to hang in for the full 5- to 10-year period currently recommended. So, when patients ask us if a couple of years of tamoxifen is going to do anything for them, we can at least potentially point to this study and say there are some data that even 2 years is better than nothing, but it’s probably not ideal,” he said.

One Comment
  1. Iridacea's avatar

    This is really useful, thank you. Ironically I just saw my oncologist May third and negotiated a one month holiday from Tamoxifen, to better gauge the side effect rodeo I’m in. Then I will start up on 10mg dose until September. He told me he didn’t have any data on 2 years vs 5 years, but that his feeling some is better than none. I’ll be at the two year mark soon. And was 43 at diagnosis.
    Anyway this feels super relevant to me- thanks for the report!

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