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ALEXANDRIA Study Egypt

AstraZeneca logo

AstraZeneca

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT03583463
D133FR00138

Details and patient eligibility

About

Breast Cancer (BC) is one of the most frequent cancers in women and is the most frequent cause of death in the female population. It represents 18% of all female cancers in the world.1 The incidence varies in different populations with almost half of the cases having their origin in North America and Western Europe. In Egypt, according to the National Population-Based Cancer Registry published in 2014, BC was the most frequent cancer among females representing 32% of all female cancers2 Metastatic disease occurs in approximately 20-50% of patients with early BC history and in 6-10% of newly diagnosed BC cases.3 Since patients with metastatic BC form a heterogeneous population, treatment recommendations ought to be made on an individual basis, considering hormone receptor (HR) and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) status, metastasis-free interval (MFI), response to and cumulative doses of previous therapy, location and extent of metastases and symptoms 4,5.

Two thirds of BC patients have HR-positive (HR+) tumors 6, for whom endocrine therapy (ET) is the preferred initial treatment for metastatic disease as recommended in the treatment guidelines, even in the presence of visceral metastases 4, 6, 7. The use of ET is supported by data showing a therapeutic benefit with less toxicity and better quality of life in comparison to chemotherapy (CT) 5,8,9. Nevertheless, it is generally thought that CT is associated with greater and earlier tumor response, especially in the case of high burden of disease. For patients with hormone receptor-positive and HER2+ disease CT plus HER2-targeted therapy was strongly recommended, except for highly selected cases for whom clinicians may offer ET 10. On the contrary, for women with hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative disease who are the scope of this study the question of whether to use CT or ET as first-line treatment for metastatic BC remains, to date, partially unresolved.

Enrollment

436 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

50+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Provision of written informed consent prior to any study specific procedures
  2. Post-menopausal women (Defined as a woman who have experienced at least 12 consecutive months without menstruation, who had undergone bilateral ovariectomy or who has menopausal levels of serum Estradiol and FSH.)
  3. Hormone receptor positive, HER2 negative locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer.
  4. Patients with either de novo metastatic disease who had not received any prior treatment or those who progressed during or after previous adjuvant endocrine treatment for early breast cancer.
  5. Hormone sensitive patients (per the ABC2 guidelines published in Annals of Oncology 00: 1-18, 2014, defined as relapse while on adjuvant ET but after the first 2 years, or a relapse after/within 12 months of completing adjuvant ET. Patients with ER+ de novo metastatic disease are also considered hormone sensitive patients)
  6. Patients have already been prescribed treatment with ET either as monotherapy or in combination or physician's choice of a standard of care chemotherapy within the previous 90 days prior to their enrolment.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Involvement in the planning and/or conduct of the study (applies to both AstraZeneca staff and/or staff at the study site)
  2. Previous inclusion in the present study
  3. Current enrollment and/or participation in another clinical study during the last 90 days.
  4. Presence of visceral crisis.
  5. Failure to meet any of the inclusion criteria.

Trial contacts and locations

8

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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