The influence of tamoxifen treatment on the oestrogen receptor in metachronous contralateral breast cancer.

Abstract

Adjuvant tamoxifen treatment reduces the occurrence of contralateral breast cancer (CBC). The aim of the study was to investigate the hypothesis that adjuvant tamoxifen reduces the occurrence of oestrogen-receptor (ER)-positive CBC, but not the growth of ER-negative CBCs, and to examine survival after diagnosis of CBC. For the study, ER status was immunohistochemically assessed in CBCs of 35 tamoxifen-treated patients and 115 patients without previous hormonal treatment. Cases were retrieved from a series of patients treated from 1984 to 1995 at nine hospitals. The interval between ipsi- and contralateral breast cancer was at least 1 year. It was seen that the proportion of patients with an ER-negative CBC was significantly higher among those with prior tamoxifen treatment: 37% vs 18% (P=0.047). No difference between the two groups in overall and disease-specific survival following CBC was found. However, the stage differed for both groups: tamoxifen users more often had node-positive contralateral disease (P= 0.045). In conclusion, metachronous CBCs developing after 1-3 years of tamoxifen treatment are more often ER-negative breast cancers. So far this does not seem to have a major impact on survival.

More about this publication

British journal of cancer
  • Volume 88
  • Issue nr. 5
  • Pages 707-10
  • Publication date 10-03-2003

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