Authors
Paul E Goss, James N Ingle, Silvana Martino, Nicholas J Robert, Hyman B Muss, Martine J Piccart, Monica Castiglione, Dongsheng Tu, Lois E Shepherd, Kathleen I Pritchard, Robert B Livingston, Nancy E Davidson, Larry Norton, Edith A Perez, Jeffrey S Abrams, Patrick Therasse, Michael J Palmer, Joseph L Pater
Publication date
2003/11/6
Journal
New England Journal of Medicine
Volume
349
Issue
19
Pages
1793-1802
Publisher
Massachusetts Medical Society
Description
Background
In hormone-dependent breast cancer, five years of postoperative tamoxifen therapy — but not tamoxifen therapy of longer duration — prolongs disease-free and overall survival. The aromatase inhibitor letrozole, by suppressing estrogen production, might improve the outcome after the discontinuation of tamoxifen therapy.
Methods
We conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to test the effectiveness of five years of letrozole therapy in postmenopausal women with breast cancer who have completed five years of tamoxifen therapy. The primary end point was disease-free survival.
Results
A total of 5187 women were enrolled (median follow-up, 2.4 years). At the first interim analysis, there were 207 local or metastatic recurrences of breast cancer or new primary cancers in the contralateral breast — 75 in the letrozole group and 132 in the placebo group — with estimated four-year disease-free …
Total citations
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