Abstract
Until recently, tamoxifen was the only adjuvant endocrine therapy for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor—positive, early-stage breast cancer. However, the first efficacy update from the ATAC (Arimidex®, Tamoxifen, Alone or in Combination) trial has introduced a choice of adjuvant therapy in this setting. After a median follow-up of 47 months, these data indicated that anastrozole continued to show superior efficacy compared with tamoxifen, including significantly greater disease-free survival, a longer median time to recurrence, and a reduced incidence of contralateral breast cancer. Anastrozole also exhibited a number of important tolerability benefits compared with tamoxifen, including reduced incidences of thromboembolic events, vaginal bleeding, and endometrial cancer. Additional ATAC subprotocols included the examination of bone mineral density and its associated sequelae, endometrial abnormalities, and quality of life. The results of these studies support the primary conclusions of the main efficacy and safety analyses: the efficacy benefits of anastrozole were not at the expense of quality of life, anastrozole was associated with reduced endometrial stimulation compared with tamoxifen, and only patients receiving tamoxifen had endometrial atypical hyperplasia. Anastrozole was associated with a modest loss of bone mineral density and an initial increase of fractures compared with tamoxifen. However, the fracture rate with anastrozole stabilizes after 2 years, and indirect comparison suggests that any increased fracture risk with anastrozole is modest. This review concludes that, based on the overall risk—benefit profile from the ATAC study, anastrozole is a rational alternative to tamoxifen for the adjuvant treatment of women with hormone-sensitive early-stage breast cancer.
Published Version
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