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Comparison of anastrozole versus tamoxifen as preoperative therapy in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer : The pre-operative “Arimidex” compared to Tamoxifen (PROACT) trial

✍ Scribed by Luigi Cataliotti; Aman U. Buzdar; Shinzaburo Noguchi; Jose Bines; Yuichi Takatsuka; Katarina Petrakova; Pierre Dube; Celia Tosello de Oliveira


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
193 KB
Volume
106
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND

The Pre‐Operative “Arimidex” Compared to Tamoxifen (PROACT) study was a randomized, multicenter study comparing anastrozole with tamoxifen as a preoperative treatment of postmenopausal women with large, operable (T2/3, N0‐2, M0), or potentially operable (T4b, N0‐2, M0) breast cancer. The effect of preoperative endocrine therapy in patients scheduled for mastectomy or with inoperable tumors at baseline was also investigated.

METHODS

Patients with hormone receptor‐positive breast cancer received anastrozole (n = 228) or tamoxifen (n = 223) with or without chemotherapy for 12 weeks before primary surgery.

RESULTS

Objective responses for anastrozole and tamoxifen occurred in 39.5% and 35.4% of patients, respectively (ultrasound measurements), and 50.0% and 46.2% of patients, respectively (caliper measurements). In hormonal therapy‐only patients (n = 314), feasible surgery at baseline improved after 3 months in 43.0% of patients receiving anastrozole and 30.8% receiving tamoxifen (P = .04). In the intent‐to‐treat population, improvement in feasible surgery at baseline to actual surgery at 3 months was found to be numerically higher in the anastrozole group compared with the tamoxifen group, although this difference did not reach significance. Drug‐related adverse events were reported in 20.2% and 18.1% of patients, respectively, in the anastrozole and tamoxifen groups.

CONCLUSIONS

Anastrozole is an effective and well‐tolerated preoperative therapy, producing clinically beneficial tumor downstaging and reductions in tumor volume. These effects enable more minimal surgical interventions in patients scheduled for mastectomy, and mastectomy in patients with previously inoperable tumors. Anastrozole appears to be at least as effective as tamoxifen in this setting, and more effective than tamoxifen in certain clinically relevant subgroups. Cancer 2006. © 2006 American Cancer Society.