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Study finds newer breast cancer
drugs save lives
Washington -
Women who switch from the breast cancer pill tamoxifen to a
newer class of drugs called aromatase inhibitors live longer,
Italian researchers reported on Monday.
Their study, published in the
journal Cancer, adds to a growing body of evidence that the new
drugs are far safer, preventing cancer with fewer side effects than
tamoxifen.
Dr. Lauren Cassell of Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York said the research is changing how doctors treat
breast cancer patients after their tumors are surgically removed.
"If they have been on tamoxifen we
are switching them to an aromatase inhibitor. If they are newly
diagnosed we are using an aromatase inhibitor instead of tamoxifen,"
she said in a statement.
But tamoxifen remains the main
option for younger women with breast cancer.
"Aromatase inhibitors are only for
women who are post-menopausal," Cassell said.
Tamoxifen
transformed breast cancer therapy when it was shown to reduce the
risk of cancer coming back by close to 50 percent. It was also an
easy-to-take pill.
But the drug raised the risk of
death from strokes and endometrial cancer.
Then a newer class of drugs, the
aromatase inhibitors, was developed.
Dr. Francesco Boccardo of the
National Cancer Research Institute and the University of Genoa in
Italy and colleagues looked at two studies of 828 women.
About half the women got tamoxifen
for five years, as was once recommended, and half got tamoxifen at
first and then switched to an aromatase inhibitor after two or three
years.
The women who switched were much
less likely to die of breast cancer or of anything else, Boccardo
reported.
"This pooled analysis provides
solid evidence that switching to an aromatase inhibitor following a
few years of tamoxifen treatment implies a mortality benefit over
continued tamoxifen and that the benefit on breast cancer-related
mortality is mainly due to the effect of switching," they wrote.
German researchers reported similar
findings in November.
Aromatase
inhibitors include anastrozole, made by AstraZeneca Plc under the
brand name Arimidex, and exemestane, made by Pfizer Inc. under the
brand name Aromasin.
Tamoxifen
-- long the drug of choice for preventing breast cancer -- blocks
estrogen, which can help fuel the growth of tumors in some cases.
It is sold by AstraZeneca under the
name Nolvadex but now is marketed by several generic drug makers.
Breast cancer is the second leading
cause of cancer death among U.S. women, after lung cancer. More than
200,000 people are diagnosed and another roughly 40,000 die from it
each year, according to the American Cancer Society. --
Reuters News
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