While a landmark study by the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) claimed that chemotherapy combined with tamoxifen could be beneficial for postmenopausal breast cancer patients, another study has claimed that this may not be true for everyone.
The second study found that a multigene test on tumours could identify a subset of patients who may not benefit from that chemotherapy.
Both studies, led by Dr. Kathy Albain, of Loyola University Health System, are based on a randomised phase III clinical trial of 1,477 postmenopausal women.
All of the women had estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer that had spread to the lymph nodes under the arm, known as the axillary lymph nodes.
All women in the trial got daily tamoxifen for up to five years, long the standard therapy for treating ER+ breast cancer, the most common form of the disease.
Estrogen latches on to receptors on these cancer cells and promotes tumour growth. Tamoxifen blocks those receptors, locking estrogen out.
Of the 1,477 women in the trial, 361 got only tamoxifen. The rest got tamoxifen plus a regimen of a three-drug chemotherapy treatment known as CAF (cyclophosphamide, Adriamycin, and 5-fluorouracil).
In the first paper, researchers saw long-term survival benefits for the women who received CAF chemotherapy. These women’s risk of dying or having a cancer recurrence was 24 percent lower than it was for women who had gottentamoxifen alone.
The team also found that those who got the chemotherapy before the tamoxifen did better than those who got both simultaneously.
The CAF group had higher overall survival rates as well.
“Ten years after the start of their treatment, 68 percent of women who received chemotherapy followed by tamoxifen were still alive, while only 60pc of women in the tamoxifen-only arm lived for at least ten years,” said Dr. William Barlow, who served as lead statistician on both studies.
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