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Evaluating Harms and Benefits of Endocrine Therapy in Patients ≥70 Years of Age With Lower Risk Breast Cancer

O

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

Status and phase

Active, not recruiting
Phase 4

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Treatments

Other: No endocrine therapy
Other: Endocrine therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04921137
REaCT-70

Details and patient eligibility

About

The current standard of care for stage 1 hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer consists of breast-conserving surgery followed by adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) and endocrine therapy (ET) for at least 5 years. The benefit of adjuvant ET for older patients is mitigated because of their increase risk of death from other causes and shorter time horizon to live. Clinical and pathological factors such as low-intermediate grade, tumor size ≤2 cm, and older age have been used in a few studies to identify patients with a lower risk of recurrence that might benefit from adjuvant therapy de-escalation, i.e. omission of RT or ET. Since there is no dedicated randomized clinical trial (RCT) conducted to evaluate the omission of ET, there is clinical equipoise as to whether we can omit adjuvant ET in older patients with lower-risk early-stage breast cancer. Therefore, we propose a randomised, multicentre trial evaluating harms and benefits of endocrine therapy in patients ≥70 years of age with lower risk breast cancer.

Full description

The current standard of care for stage 1 hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer consists of breast-conserving surgery followed by adjuvant radiotherapy (RT) and endocrine therapy (ET) for at least 5 years. The benefit of adjuvant ET for older patients is mitigated because of their increase risk of death from other causes and shorter time horizon to live. This population is also more likely to have additional comorbidities which can lead to higher treatment-related adverse events impacting quality of life and precipitating functional decline. Clinical and pathological factors such as low-intermediate grade, tumor size ≤2 cm, and older age have been used in a few studies to identify patients with a lower risk of recurrence that might benefit from adjuvant therapy de-escalation, i.e. omission of RT or ET. The body of evidence from small prospective studies, mathematical modelling study and retrospective analyses would suggest that the omission of ET in older patients with favourable HR+ breast cancer who had optimal local therapy (i.e. breast conserving surgery followed by adjuvant radiotherapy) does not compromise locoregional and survival outcomes. Since there is no dedicated randomized clinical trial (RCT) conducted to evaluate the omission of ET, there is clinical equipoise as to whether we can omit adjuvant ET in older patients with lower-risk early-stage breast cancer. Therefore, we propose a randomised, multicentre trial evaluating harms and benefits of endocrine therapy in patients ≥70 years of age with lower risk breast cancer.

Enrollment

109 patients

Sex

All

Ages

70+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • New invasive estrogen and/or progesterone receptor-positive (ER+ and/or PR+), HER2-negative (HER2-) invasive breast carcinoma diagnosis as per ASCO-CAP guidelines
  • The primary tumour characteristics are either: Grade 1 and ≤5 cm on microscope exam, OR Grade 2 and ≤3 cm on microscope exam, OR Grade 3 and ≤1 cm on microscope exam
  • Treated with standard loco-regional therapy: breast conserving surgery followed by adjuvant radiotherapy OR total mastectomy
  • Axillary lymph node-negative (N0)
  • Able to provide oral consent and complete questionnaires in French or English as per study protocol

Exclusion criteria

  • Metastatic cancer

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

109 participants in 2 patient groups

Omission of endocrine therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Omission of endocrine therapy
Treatment:
Other: No endocrine therapy
Administration of endocrine therapy for at least 5 years
Active Comparator group
Description:
Administration of endocrine therapy for at least 5 years
Treatment:
Other: Endocrine therapy

Trial contacts and locations

7

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Central trial contact

Lisa Vandermeer, MSc; Marta Sienkiewicz, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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