Tamoxifen may not prevent breast cancer.U.S. researchers sparked a transatlantic debate this spring when they announced that the drug tamoxifen tamoxifen (təmŏk`sĭfĕn'), synthetic hormone used in the treatment of breast cancer. Introduced in 1978, tamoxifen is used to prevent recurrences of cancer in women who have already undergone surgery to remove their tumors. can prevent women from developing breast cancer. Researchers in Britain responded that longer studies were necessary to justify that conclusion. Now, two teams of European researchers offer some support for those critics. In the July 11 Lancet, both groups report preliminary findings that indicate tamoxifen--a widely prescribed medication for limiting breast cancer recurrence--provides no significant protective effect. Like the U.S. researchers, teams in England and Italy examined whether the drug reduces the number of new cases of cancer among healthy women with no previous breast cancer but who were, for a variety of reasons, at high risk of contracting the disease. Neither study found a significant difference in cancer incidence between women who took an inactive substance, or placebo, and those who received tamoxifen. In contrast, the U.S. Breast Cancer Prevention Trial had found that among participants diagnosed with invasive breast cancer, almost twice as many were taking the placebo as tamoxifen (SN: 4/11/98, p. 228). Citing statistical shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw. Shortcomings may also be:
The U.S. team calculated the odds at 1 in 10,000 that its results were due to chance alone. Barnett Kramer of the National Cancer Institute (NCI See Liberate. ) in Bethesda, Md., which sponsored the U.S. study, argues that this trial was the most accurate because of its large size--13,388 women participated. In contrast, only 2,494 women were included in the British study, and 5,408 women participated in the Italian trial. The British study, however, tracked its participants for almost 6 years, compared with only about 4 years in both the U.S. and Italian trials. The NCI halted its study last March, after finding what they termed dramatic evidence of tamoxifen's protective benefit. "I have seen nothing in either of those [LANCET] articles which would lead me to change our conclusions in any way," says Bernard Fisher of Allegheny University of the Health Sciences Allegheny University of the Health Sciences was formed in 1994 when the Medical College of Pennsylvania (MCP) and Hahnemann University merged to form the largest private medical school in the US (MCP Hahnemann School of Medicine), under the new University of the Health Sciences, in Pittsburgh, who directed the U.S. trial. The latest reports have nevertheless renewed discussion about whether any protective benefit of tamoxifen outweighs its side effects Side effects Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. , which can include uterine cancer uterine cancer Malignant tumour of the uterus. Cancers affecting the lining of the uterus (endometrium) are the most common cancers of the female reproductive tract. and life-threatening blood clots Blood Clots Definition A blood clot is a thickened mass in the blood formed by tiny substances called platelets. Clots form to stop bleeding, such as at the site of cut. . "What cautious people thought was, we shouldn't jump to act based on that one [U.S.] study," says Cynthia Pearson of the National Women's Health Network The National Women's Health Network is a non-profit women's health advocacy organization located in Washington, D.C.. It was founded in 1975 by Barbara Seaman, Alice Wolfson, Belita Cowan, Mary Howell, M.D., and Phyllis Chesler, Ph.D. in Washington, D.C. Significant differences between the participants in the U.S. and European studies may explain the contrasting results, Fisher says. More women in the U.S. study had passed menopause, which is associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. Also, the European researchers allowed participants to treat symptoms of menopause with estrogenlike drugs, which Kramer says could have distorted the results. Estrogen helps breast cancer cells grow, and tamoxifen blocks its action. In a commentary in the same issue of Lancet, Kathleen I. Pritchard of the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, says the U.S. findings "seem robust." But, she adds, the disparate results suggest that tamoxifen may only initially suppress the growth of small, difficult-to-detect tumors. In the longer term, those cancers may grow if they become resistant to tamoxifen or if a woman stops preventive therapy. |
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