Back to Search Start Over

DCIS and aromatase inhibitors

Authors :
J Michael Dixon
Linda Williams
Dean B. Evans
Lorna Renshaw
J. Murray
E. Jane Macaskill
Sharon A. White
O. Young
Dana Faratian
Jeremy Thomas
Source :
The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology. 106(1-5)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

In patients with hormone receptor positive DCIS tamoxifen reduces recurrence rates by almost 50%. Few data are available with aromatase inhibitors from randomised studies. In the ATAC study there were three DCIS lesions in the anastrozole arm and four in the tamoxifen arm in the women with ER positive invasive cancer. In the MA17 study which randomised patients to up to 5 years of letrozole or placebo there was only one DCIS event in the contralateral breast in patients taking letrozole and five on placebo. There were also four patients in this study who had DCIS in the conserved breast on placebo and none in the letrozole treated group. The few clinical data that are available therefore suggest the aromatase inhibitors are likely to be effective in DCIS. A histological review of a study of 206 postmenopausal women with invasive oestrogen receptor positive breast cancer who were randomised as part of a 14 day preoperative study to receive 2.5mg of letrozole or 1mg of anastrozole identified 27 patients with 28 pairs of tumours in whom there was sufficient ER positive DCIS in invasive cancer in the initial core biopsy and in the subsequent surgery specimen, to evaluate for PgR activity and proliferation. Within the DCIS both aromatase inhibitors significantly reduced PgR expression and both drugs also produced a significant fall in proliferation. There was a moderate degree of agreement between the fall in PgR in both the invasive cancer and DCIS (Kappa=0.5; p=0.0013) and between the fall in proliferation and between the invasive and in situ components (correlation coefficient=0.68; p

Details

ISSN :
09600760
Volume :
106
Issue :
1-5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7d37a22fc913fdc06f01ec740d99b62