A study co-authored by a Loyola
researcher and published in the New England Journal of Medicine is
offering new hope to women with advanced breast cancer.
The study found that combing two drugs
that normally are each given as single agents significantly extended the
lives of women with metastatic breast cancer. Kathy Albain, MD, a
breast cancer specialist at Loyola University Medical Center, is among
the main authors of the study.
The study found that women who
initially
took the drugs anastrozole and fulvestrant at the same time together
lived more than six months longer than women who took anastrozole alone,
with fulvestrant given later when the disease progressed.
“This study is the first to show that
combination hormonal therapy alone without chemotherapy improves
survival in advanced breast cancer,” Albain said. “This most likely will
change the standard of care for how we treat these patients.”
First author is Rita Mehta, MD, of the University of California at Irvine.
Anastrozole (brand name, Arimidex®) is a
pill that is taken daily. It is in a class of medications called
aromatase inhibitors. It works by decreasing the amount of estrogen the
body makes. (Estrogen fuels breast cancer.) Fulvestrant (brand name
Faslodex®) is given by injection. It binds to estrogen receptors,
thereby blocking the effect estrogen has on cancer cells.
The study included 707 postmenopausal
women who had metastatic breast cancer that was
hormone-receptor-positive. About half the women were randomly assigned
to receive the standard regimen: treat first with anastrozole, and after
the disease progresses, switch to fulvestrant. The other half were
randomly assigned to receive anastrozole and fulvestrant in combination.
Women who received the standard regimen
survived a median of 41.3 months. Women who received the two drugs in
combination survived a median of 47.7 months.
Among women who received the standard
regimen, it took a median of 13.5 months for the disease to progress.
Among those who received the drugs in combination, it took 15 months
before the disease progressed.
The combination treatment produced even greater benefits among women who had not previously taken tamoxifen.
Side effects generally were similar in
both treatment groups, although only the combination group experienced
the most severe side effects (one stroke and two pulmonary embolisms).
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