Prolonging Tamoxifen Therapy for Primary Breast Cancer
Findings from the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project Clinical Trial
- BERNARD FISHER, M.D.;
- ANN BROWN, ScD.;
- NORMAN WOLMARK, M.D.;
- CAROL REDMOND, ScD.;
- D. LAWRENCE WICKERHAM, M.D.;
- JAMES WITTLIFF, Ph.D.;
- NIKOLAY DIMITROV, M.D.;
- SANDRA LEGAULT-POISSON, M.D.;
- HARVEY SCHIPPER, M.D.; and
- DAVID PRAGER, M.D.
- NSABP INVESTIGATORS; Pittsburgh and Allentown, Pennsylvania; Louisville, Kentucky; East Lansing, Michigan; and Montreal, Quebec, and Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether prolonging the duration of tamoxifen administration beyond the cessation of a combined chemotherapy regimen benefits patients with primary breast cancer with positive findings in axillary nodes who benefit initially from the combined regimen.
Design: Nonrandomized, nonconcurrent cohort study.
Setting: National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project, conducted in 68 institutions in North America.
Patients: Women were included if they had breast cancer with positive nodes and were aged 49 years or less with both estrogen and progesterone receptor levels of 10 fmol or more, aged 50 to 59 years with progesterone receptor levels of 10 fmol or more, or aged 60 to 69 years. Two cohorts were compared: patients who were randomly assigned to the tamoxifen arm of the adjuvant chemotherapy trial (randomized patients) and women who were added to this arm after randomization had ceased (registered patients). Three hundred seventy-seven women in each group who were disease free at the end of the initial 2-year treatment period were followed for an additional 3 years.
Interventions: All received melphalan, fluorouracil, and tamoxifen (10 mg twice daily by mouth) for 2 years. Registered patients (but not randomized patients) were offered tamoxifen for a third year after the initial 2-year treatment period, and 273 (72%) agreed.
Measurements and Main Results: Women receiving a third year of tamoxifen had a better disease-free survival rate (odds ratio, 1.54; 95% confidence interval, 1.14 to 2.07; p = 0.004) and survival rate (odds ratio, 1.56; 95% Cl, 1.02 to 2.37; p = 0.04) through their fifth postoperative year. Women aged 50 years or more benefited, but those aged 49 years or less did not.
Conclusions: The benefit of tamoxifen given to tamoxifen-responsive patients in conjunction with melphalan and fluorouracil appears to be enhanced when the tamoxifen treatment is continued beyond cessation of treatment with these agents.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical School, and the Department of Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Hormone Receptor Laboratory, James Graham Brown Cancer Center, Louisville, Kentucky; Department of Medical Oncology-Hematology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan; Department of Surgery, Saint Luc Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Department of Medical Oncology-Hematology, Manitoba Cancer Foundation, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; and the Department of Medical Oncology-Hematology, Allentown Hospital and Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, Pennsylvania. See Appendix 1 for the names of other NSABP Investigators.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Bernard Fisher, M.D.; NSABP Headquarters, Room 914 Scaife Hall, 3550 Terrace Street; Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
- ©1987 American College of Physicians
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