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Efficacy of Fulvestrant in Women with Hormone-Resistant Metastatic Breast Cancer (mBC): A Canadian Province Experience †
SIMPLE SUMMARY: Fulvestrant is a medication that is approved as first and second-line treatment in patients with hormone receptor positive advanced breast cancer. In clinical practice, fulvestrant is still used beyond the second line of treatment. This study investigated the use of fulvestrant in a...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8391338/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34439317 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13164163 |
Sumario: | SIMPLE SUMMARY: Fulvestrant is a medication that is approved as first and second-line treatment in patients with hormone receptor positive advanced breast cancer. In clinical practice, fulvestrant is still used beyond the second line of treatment. This study investigated the use of fulvestrant in a Saskatchewan population of women with advanced breast cancer. We found that fulvestrant is effective when used in both the early and later lines of treatment, although the benefit is more pronounced in the earlier line of therapy. Women with disease affecting their visceral organs such as lung, liver or peritoneum had decreased disease control and survival on fulvestrant. Women who had received chemotherapy after fulvestrant and had a clinical response to fulvestrant had better survival. ABSTRACT: Introduction: Fulvestrant has demonstrated efficacy in hormone receptor positive (HR+) metastatic breast cancer (mBC), both in first-and second-line settings. In clinical practice, however, fulvestrant has been used as a later-line therapy. This study assessed the efficacy of fulvestrant in women with mBC in early-versus later-line therapy. Methods: This retrospective cohort study assessed Saskatchewan women with HR+ mBC who received fulvestrant between 2003–2019. A multivariate Cox proportional survival analysis was performed. Results: One hundred and eighty-six women with a median age of 63.5 years were identified—178 (95.6%) had hormone-resistant mBC, 57.5% had visceral disease, and 43.0% had received chemotherapy before fulvestrant. 102 (54.8%) women received ≤2-line-therapy, and 84 (45.2%) received ≥3 line-therapy before fulvestrant. The median time to progression (TTP) was 12 months in the early-treatment vs. 6 months in the later-treatment group, p = 0.015. Overall survival (OS) from the start of fulvestrant was 26 months in the early-treatment group vs. 16 months in the later-treatment group, p = 0.067. On multivariate analysis, absence of visceral metastasis, HR: 0.70 (0.50–0.99), was significantly correlated with better TTP, whereas post-fulvestrant chemotherapy, HR: 0.32 (0.23–0.47), clinical benefit from fulvestrant, HR: 0.44 (0.30–0.65), and absence of visceral metastasis, HR: 0.70 (0.50–0.97), were correlated with better OS. Conclusions: Fulvestrant has demonstrated efficacy as both early-and later-line therapy in hormone-resistant mBC. Our results show that women with clinical benefit from fulvestrant, who received post-fulvestrant chemotherapy, or had non-visceral disease, had better survival. |
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