Raloxifene protects postmenopausal women from developing invasive breast cancer whether they are at high or low risk of developing the disease
Raloxifene protects postmenopausal women from developing
invasive breast cancer whether they are at high or low risk of developing the
disease, according to an article in the September 1 issue of Clinical Cancer Research.
Use of the drug appeared to reduce risk in women with a family history of breast
cancer to a level comparable with that of women without affected relatives.
The research team conducted a new analysis of the first
large study of raloxifene, which tested the ability of the drug to prevent vertebral
fractures in 7,705 postmenopausal women diagnosed with osteoporosis. The secondary
endpoint of this multi-center, double-blind trial, known as MORE (Multiple Outcomes
of Raloxifene Evaluation), was the drug’s effect on breast cancer development.
The results, announced in 1999, demonstrated a 72-percent reduction in invasive
breast cancer incidence after four years of raloxifene treatment compared with
placebo.
The MORE trial was extended four years to further evaluate
the effect of raloxifene on breast cancer incidence in 4,011 of the original participants.
Results of this trial, known as CORE (Continuing Outcomes Relevant to Evista),
showed that eight years of raloxifene treatment was associated with a 66-percent
decrease in invasive breast cancer incidence.
The current analysis was undertaken to assess the effect
of raloxifene on level of breast cancer risk (higher versus lower) using data
from both MORE and CORE.
Women at higher risk for breast cancer are generally older and have a greater
lifetime exposure to estrogen, and the researchers found that this association
held true in the reanalysis. But they also found that raloxifene reduced breast
cancer risk in both women at lower and those at higher breast cancer risk, except
for those women who had measurably low levels of estradiol, the major estrogen
hormone in humans.
“In each variable commonly associated with a higher risk
for developing breast cancer - age older than 65, age at menopause, a body mass
index greater than 25, higher estradiol levels, prior use of estrogen replacement
and a family history of breast cancer - use of raloxifene reduced incidence of
breast cancer when compared to a placebo drug,” lead author Marc E. Lippman, MD,
said. “But it also reduced incidence in each of those variables that should have
lowered risk, such as younger age, later menopause, etc., compared to use of a
placebo drug.”
Compared with placebo, raloxifene was associated with
a 58-percent reduction in breast cancer risk in women without a family history
of the disease and an 89-percent reduction in risk for women with a positive family
history.
Lippman stressed that he cannot comment on how raloxifene
in this study measures up to tamoxifen use in general. He explains that although
these findings come on the heels of the June publication of the 19,747-participant
STAR trial, which evaluated tamoxifen against raloxifene in reducing breast cancer
risk, no comparison can be made between the MORE, CORE and STAR clinical trials.
“These studies looked at two different groups of women,”
Dr. Lippman said. “Women enrolled in STAR were at high risk for developing breast
cancer, so presumably, they had higher levels of estrogen in general. Women who
participated in MORE and CORE were older and had osteoporoses and it is assumed
that these women generally have lower levels of estrogen, because that is a risk
factor for development of the disorder.”
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