Estrogen-Blocking Drugs May Lower Breast Cancer Risk

Posted: Published on April 30th, 2013

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

Drugs that block estrogen may lower women's risk of breast cancer for 10 years, according to a new review of studies.

Postmenopausal women in the studies who took drugs called selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), such as tamoxifen, were 38 percent less likely to develop any type of breast cancer over a 10-year period, compared with women who werent taking SERMs. The studies also involved the SERMs raloxifene, arzoxifene and lasofoxifene.

The review shows that "each of these drugs will prevent breast cancer in populations of women," said Dr. V. Craig Jordan, scientific director of oncology at the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown University.

The review "places into perspective the 40-year journey" of SERM research, said Jordan, whose studies in the 1970s showed that tamoxifen prevented mammary cancer in rats. He was not involved in the new study.

Only tamoxifen and raloxifene are approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the prevention of breast cancer, and only tamoxifen is approved for use in premenopausal women who are at high risk for breast cancer. The other drugs in the studies are currently being studied as treatments for osteoporosis, but they also lower the risk of breast cancer, Jordan said.

The drugs come with side effects that have made women reluctant to take them, he said. The common side effects are similar to symptoms of menopause, including hot flashes and vaginal dryness.

"There is the belief that the gains do not exceed the discomfort," Jordan said. "I think it is now time for women to seriously consider taking advantage" of the drugs' effects. Women should talk with their doctors about their options, he noted.

In the new review, researchers looked at nine studies involving more than 83,000 women. Eight of the studies compared taking a SERM with taking a placebo, while one study compared raloxifene to tamoxifen.

Researchers found that 4.2 percent of women taking a SERM developed breast cancer, while 6.3 percent of women in the control groups developed breast cancer.

The reduction in risk was primarily seen with estrogen-receptor positive breast cancers, which are fueled by estrogen, according to the study.

Originally posted here:
Estrogen-Blocking Drugs May Lower Breast Cancer Risk

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