The adjuvant treatment of breast cancer

M Kelleher, D Miles

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Risk of relapse of breast cancer depends largely on tumour features: size, grade and, particularly, lymph node status. Adjuvant systemic therapies reduce risk of relapse and death, as shown in several meta-analyses. Relative risk reductions are similar across different prognostic groups but the absolute benefits are greater in those with a worse prognosis. Combination chemotherapy is superior to single agent regimens but longer duration (>6 months) gives no additional benefit compared with six months of therapy Benefits from adjuvant chemotherapy diminish with the age of the patient. CMF type regimens have been most widely used: anthracyclines can reduce risk of relapse by 12% (an absolute survival benefit of about 3%) but with greater toxicity. Early trials of taxoids look promising but benefit was seen only in those with ER- tumours. Tamoxifen is the most extensively used endocrine adjuvant therapy, and is associated with a reduction in risk of death of 26% independent of age or menopausal status but only in those with ER+ tumours. Aromatase inhibitors are effective only in postmenopausal women and, although the early results with anastrozole look promising, long-term efficacy and toxicity studies are presently lacking, so five years of tamoxifen is standard treatment for women with ER+ tumours.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)195 - 199
Number of pages5
JournalInternational Journal of Clinical Practice
Volume57
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - 2003

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