Anastrozole versus tamoxifen as first-line therapy for advanced breast cancer in 668 postmenopausal women: results of the Tamoxifen or Arimidex Randomized Group Efficacy and Tolerability study
- PMID: 11078487
- DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2000.18.22.3748
Anastrozole versus tamoxifen as first-line therapy for advanced breast cancer in 668 postmenopausal women: results of the Tamoxifen or Arimidex Randomized Group Efficacy and Tolerability study
Erratum in
- J Clin Oncol. 2012 Jan 20;30(3):343
Abstract
Purpose: To compare the efficacy and tolerability of anastrozole (Arimidex; AstraZeneca, Wilmington, DE, and Macclesfield, United Kingdom) with that of tamoxifen as first-line therapy for advanced breast cancer (ABC) in postmenopausal women.
Patients and methods: This randomized, double-blind, multicenter study evaluated the efficacy of anastrozole 1 mg once daily relative to tamoxifen 20 mg once daily in patients with tumors that were hormone receptor-positive or of unknown receptor status who were eligible for endocrine therapy. The primary end points were time to progression (TTP), objective response (OR), and tolerability.
Results: A total of 668 patients (340 in the anastrozole arm and 328 in the tamoxifen arm) were randomized to treatment and followed-up for a median of 19 months. Median TTP was similar for both treatments (8.2 months in patients who received anastrozole and 8.3 months in patients who received tamoxifen). The tamoxifen:anastrozole hazards ratio was 0.99 (lower one-sided 95% confidence limit, 0.86), demonstrating that anastrozole was at least equivalent to tamoxifen. Anastrozole was also as effective as tamoxifen in terms of OR (32.9% of anastrozole and 32.6% of tamoxifen patients achieved a complete response [CR] or partial response [PR]). Clinical benefit (CR + PR + stabilization of > or = 24 weeks) rates were 56.2% and 55.5% for patients receiving anastrozole and tamoxifen, respectively. Both treatments were well tolerated. However, incidences of thromboembolic events and vaginal bleeding were reported in fewer patients treated with anastrozole than with tamoxifen (4.8% v 7.3% [thromboembolic events] and 1.2% v 2.4% [vaginal bleeding], respectively).
Conclusion: Anastrozole satisfied the predefined criteria for equivalence to tamoxifen. Together with the lower observed incidence of thromboembolic events and vaginal bleeding, these findings indicate that anastrozole should be considered as first-line therapy for postmenopausal women with ABC.
Comment in
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Is anastrozole superior to tamoxifen as first-line therapy for advanced breast cancer?J Clin Oncol. 2001 May 1;19(9):2578; author reply 2580-2. J Clin Oncol. 2001. PMID: 11331343 No abstract available.
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Superior efficacy of letrozole versus tamoxifen as first-line therapy.J Clin Oncol. 2002 Feb 1;20(3):876-8. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2002.20.3.876. J Clin Oncol. 2002. PMID: 11821477 No abstract available.
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Anastrozole versus tamoxifen as first-line therapy for advanced breast cancer: methodologic issues.J Clin Oncol. 2002 Sep 1;20(17):3748-9; author reply 3749-50. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2002.99.430. J Clin Oncol. 2002. PMID: 12202679 No abstract available.
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