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  3. Long-term Follow-up and Safety of Patients after an Upfront Therapy with Letrozole for Early Breast Cancer in Routine Clinical Care - The PreFace Study.
 

Long-term Follow-up and Safety of Patients after an Upfront Therapy with Letrozole for Early Breast Cancer in Routine Clinical Care - The PreFace Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/192837
Publisher DOI
10.1055/a-2238-3153
PubMed ID
38344045
Description
INTRODUCTION

Adjuvant treatment of patients with early-stage breast cancer (BC) should include an aromatase inhibitor (AI). Especially patients with a high recurrence risk might benefit from an upfront therapy with an AI for a minimum of five years. Nevertheless, not much is known about the patient selection for this population in clinical practice. Therefore, this study analyzed the prognosis and patient characteristics of postmenopausal patients selected for a five-year upfront letrozole therapy.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

From 2009 to 2011, 3529 patients were enrolled into the adjuvant phase IV PreFace clinical trial (NCT01908556). Postmenopausal hormone receptor-positive BC patients, for whom an upfront five-year therapy with letrozole (2.5 mg/day) was indicated, were eligible. Disease-free survival (DFS), overall survival (OS) and safety in relation to patient and tumor characteristics were assessed.

RESULTS

3297 patients started letrozole therapy. The majority of patients (n = 1639, 57%) completed the five-year treatment. 34.5% of patients continued with endocrine therapy after the mandated five-year endocrine treatment. Five-year DFS rates were 89% (95% CI: 88-90%) and five-year OS rates were 95% (95% CI: 94-96%). In subgroup analyses, DFS rates were 83%, 84% and 78% for patients with node-positive disease, G3 tumor grading, and pT3 tumors respectively. The main adverse events (any grade) were pain and hot flushes (66.8% and 18.3% of patients).

CONCLUSIONS

The risk profile of postmenopausal BC patients selected for a five-year upfront letrozole therapy showed a moderate recurrence and death risk. However, in subgroups with unfavorable risk factors, prognosis warrants an improvement, which might be achieved with novel targeted therapies.
Date of Publication
2024-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
aromatase inhibitors early breast cancer hormone therapy letrozole prognosis
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Hack, Carolin C
Maass, Nicolai
Aktas, Bahriye
Kümmel, Sherko
Thomssen, Christoph
Wolf, Christopher
Kolberg, Hans-Christian
Brucker, Cosima
Janni, Wolfgang
Dall, Peter
Schneeweiss, Andreas
Marme, Frederik
Ruebner, Matthias
Theuser, Anna-Katharin
Hofmann, Nadine M
Böhm, Sybille
Almstedt, Katrin
Kellner, Sara
Gass, Paul
Sütterlin, Marc W
Lück, Hans-Joachim
Schmatloch, Sabine
Kalder, Matthias
Uleer, Christoph
Juhasz-Böss, Ingolf
Hanf, Volker
Jackisch, Christian
Müller, Volkmar
Rack, Brigitte
Belleville, Erik
Wallwiener, Diethelm
Rody, Achim
Rauh, Claudia
Universitätsklinik für Frauenheilkunde
Bayer, Christian M
Uhrig, Sabrina
Goossens, Chloë
Huebner, Hanna
Brucker, Sara Y
Häberle, Lothar
Fehm, Tanja N
Hein, Alexander
Fasching, Peter A
Additional Credits
Universitätsklinik für Frauenheilkunde
Series
Geburtshilfe und Frauenheilkunde
Publisher
Thieme
ISSN
0016-5751
Related URL(s)
https://boris.unibe.ch/196430/
Access(Rights)
open.access
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