 |  | 

PRESS RELEASE: Tamoxifen Effective at Lower Doses, Study Shows
[06/04/2003; Journal of the National Cancer Institute]
Decreasing the dose of the breast cancer prevention drug tamoxifen
may cut the risk of side effects associated with the drug without
reducing its effectiveness, according to a pilot study in the
June 4 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The study found that 1 mg of tamoxifen a day had the same effect
on reducing levels of a breast cancer proliferation marker as
the standard 20 mg of tamoxifen a day.
Tamoxifen is a selective estrogen receptor modulator that decreases
the risk of death in women with hormone-responsive breast cancer
and prevents the disease in high-risk women. However, tamoxifen
therapy has also been associated with an increase in risk of
endometrial tumors, uterine sarcoma, and venous thromboembolic
events such as blood clots. Researchers have suggested lowering
the dose of tamoxifen to avoid these side effects, but whether
tamoxifen remains effective at lower doses is unclear.
To find out, Andrea Decensi, M.D., of the European Institute of
Oncology in Milan, Italy, and colleagues randomly assigned 120
women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer to receive
1 mg/day, 5 mg/day, or the standard 20 mg/day of tamoxifen for
4 weeks.
To determine the effectiveness of tamoxifen, they measured
expression levels of the tumor cell proliferation marker Ki-67
and biomarkers for breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, and
bone fracture.
At the end of the treatment, Ki-67 expression had decreased by
an average of 15% in all three dosage groups, compared with an
average 12.8% increase in separate control groups.
Lower doses
of tamoxifen were associated with a reduction in other biomarkers
as well, including antithrombin-III, which helps regulate thrombosis
or blood clotting. "We speculate that a lower dose of tamoxifen
may have diminished prothrombotic effects, as suggested by the
lack of modulation of antithrombin-III ... ," the authors write.
They say that although new drugs such as anastrozole--an aromatase
inhibitor--are promising, tamoxifen is still the standard therapy
for women with hormone-responsive breast cancer. "Our results
support the notion that a reasonable approach to improving the
risk-to-benefit ratio associated with tamoxifen is a dose reduction,"
they write. "Further clinical studies addressing this issue,
both in treatment and prevention settings, are warranted."
In an accompanying editorial, Kendall Wu, Ph.D., and Powel Brown,
M.D., Ph.D., of the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, say
that the new findings are "provocative" but they do not support
changing standard practice.
They agree that the results justify
future randomized trials of low-dose tamoxifen, but they add
that the findings should not overshadow the results of large-scale
randomized clinical trials that show a clinically significant
benefit of tamoxifen at the 20 mg/day dose.
"Is low-dose tamoxifen useful for the treatment and prevention
of breast cancer?" they ask. "Possibly, but for now, clinicians
should continue to use tamoxifen at the current standard dose
of 20 mg/day."
Ann's NOTE: I have often speculated that drugs get approved at higher-than-necessary doses. One such drug is xeloda or capecitabine which many clinicians use at off label doses of 1800 - 2000 mg rather than 2500.
If I were intending to use Tamoxifen personally, I would try it at the lower dose. Making such decisions always depends upon your personal profile of risks and benefits.
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|