Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Hormone therapy is recommended for five years in all patients with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer, but there is no consensus on its duration in low-risk tumours and especially in postmenopausal women. Adjuvant endocrine therapy (ET) is associated with substantial side effects and long-term decreased quality of life.
Moreover, while it has been shown that ET provides a real benefit in reducing the relapse rate over time, the deterioration in quality of life may also have a negative effect on patient adherence to treatment. It is therefore important to offer treatment to women with low-risk cancer less intensive treatment strategies. If recent trials tested longer durations as compared to 5 years for high-risk cancers, older trials have tested shorter durations. The 5-year duration appeared at that time as the gold standard because of optimal benefit-risk ratios of tamoxifen among high-risk patients. However shorter treatments of 2-3 years were already associated with substantial benefits and may be enough for very low risk patients.
Full description
Adjuvant ET is the cornerstone treatment of localized hormone-receptor positive breast cancer, with demonstrated benefits on overall survival (30-40% relative decrease in mortality) but also on the risk of local and contralateral relapse (43-50% relative decrease). While the relative benefit of 5 years ET is identical for small tumors as compared to larger ones, the absolute benefit is much lower, and the risk-benefit ratio may therefore become very questionable given the frequent and impactful side effects of ET. If recent trials tested longer durations as compared to 5 years for high-risk cancers, older trials have tested shorter durations. Five years appeared at that time as the gold standard because of optimal benefit-risk ratios of tamoxifen among rather high-risk patients. However shorter treatments of 2-3 years were already associated with substantial benefits and may be enough for very low risk patients. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that adjuvant hormone therapy limited to 2 years of antiaromatase in postmenopausal women with a good prognosis can ensure very high survival without metastatic relapse and allows a reduction of side effects and a better quality of life. The 5-year DMFS was excellent in patients with low risk Luminal A tumors who received endocrine therapy.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Postmenopausal women: Postmenopausal status is defined by any of the following:
Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-1
Women with histologically proven invasive unilateral breast cancer Note: In case of a multifocal invasive tumor, all lesions (maximum 3 infiltrating lesions allowed) must be of identical phenotype and low biological risk
M0: Not clinically nor radiologically detectable metastases at time of inclusion
Primary tumor completely resected and adequate axillary surgery performed, according to current standards
IHC expression of the estrogen receptor and/or progesterone receptor ≥50%
HER2 negative according to ASCO criteria in immunohistochemistry and/or genomic analysis (HER2 negativity is defined as IHC 0-1+, or [IHC 2+ and FISH or CISH nonamplified])
No indication of adjuvant chemotherapy
pT1 (tumor ≤20 mm), pN0, Grade 1 or Grade 2 OR pT2 (tumor ≤30 mm) and pN0, Grade 1 or Grade 2
Note 1: patient with Grade 2 pT2pN0 tumor must be aged under 70 years of age and should receive a genomic test as part of standard care (RIHN reimbursement)
Patient considered has having a luminal A ultralow risk of metastatic recurrence (i.e.less than 5% risk of metastatic relapse at 10 years) according to MammaPrint® and Blueprint® tests.
Note 1: To be eligible, MammaPrint index score should be > +0.355
Patients eligible to receive or have recently started (with a maximum of 4 months of adjuvant hormone therapy prior to enrollment) an adjuvant hormone therapy (letrozole, anastrozole, or exemestane)
Patient is willing and able to comply with the protocol for the duration of the study including scheduled visits, treatment plan, laboratory tests and other study procedures
Patients must be affiliated to a Social Security System (or equivalent)
Patient must have signed a written informed consent form prior to any trial specific procedures. When the patient is physically unable to give their written consent, a trusted person of their choice, independent from the investigator or the sponsor, can confirm in writing the patient's consent.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
696 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Clara GUYONNEAU, PharmD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal