| Literature DB >> 29551913 |
Marta Venturelli1, Giorgia Guaitoli1, Claudia Omarini1, Luca Moscetti2.
Abstract
Endocrine treatment represents the cornerstone of endocrine-sensitive premenopausal early breast cancer. The estrogen blockade plays a leading role in the therapeutic management of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer together with surgery, radiotherapy, and selective antiestrogen treatments. For several years, selective estrogen receptor modulators, such as tamoxifen, have represented the mainstay of therapy. The role of amenorrhea has been extensively elucidated in the past year: the benefit observed with chemotherapy-induced amenorrhea has strengthened its therapeutic role. Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) has been introduced in oncology practice to induce amenorrhea in order to increase the advantage obtained from endocrine treatment. Triptorelin is one of the most widely used LHRH analogs currently available in clinical practice. It was recently investigated in two major clinical trials that studied the role of complete estrogen blockade in the premenopausal setting. Both showed the clinical benefit due to ovarian suppression treatment, primarily in high-risk patients. Furthermore, triptorelin and other LHRH analogs have recently been investigated in the attempt to preserve the ovarian function in young patients. The medical treatment of early breast cancer is always evolving in the effort to search for safe and efficacious treatments. The role of LHRH analogs is actually well recognized as contributing to the improvement of the medical treatment of premenopausal women with early breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: LHRH; adjuvant; amenorrhea; hormone therapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29551913 PMCID: PMC5844254 DOI: 10.2147/BCTT.S137508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer (Dove Med Press) ISSN: 1179-1314
Randomized trials evaluating chemotherapy and chemotherapy ± ovarian suppression
| Author | Year | Type of study | Patients (n) | Intervention | HR (n) | Primary endpoint | Hazard ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Castiglione-Gertsch et al | 2003 | Randomized | 1063 | Goserelin | ER negative (315) | 5-Year DFS (%) (95% CI) | 1.13 (0.83–1.53) | 0.44 |
| Goserelin | ER positive (720) | 81% (76–87) | 1.52 (0.89–2.58) | 0.12 | ||||
| Davidson et al | 2005 | Randomized | 1503 | CAF | ER positive | 9-Year DFS (%) | 0.93 (0.76–1.12) | 0.22 |
| Arriagada et al | 2005 | Randomized | 926 | Chemotherapy | ER positive | 10-Year OS (%) (95% CI) | 1.2 (0.9–1.7) | 0.19 |
| Kaufmann et al | 2007 | Randomized | 776 | Chemotherapy | ER negative (465) | 5-Year EFS (%) (95% CI) | 1.01 (0.72–1.42) | 0.97 |
| Baum et al | 2006 | Meta-analysis | 2710 | Standard adjuvant therapy | ER positive | 5-Year EFS (%) (95% CI) | 0.80 (0.69–0.92) | 0.002 |
| Adjuvant Breast Cancer Trials Collaborative Group | 2007 | Randomized | 2144 | 5 years tamoxifen (± chemotherapy | ER positive | 5-Year OS (%) (95% CI) | ||
| Roché et al | 2006 | Randomized | 333 | Triptorelin plus tamoxifen FEC50 | ER positive | 7-Year DFS (%) (95% CI) | 0.94 (0.78–1.13) | 0.44 |
Notes:
CAF/FEC/CMF.
Ovarian radiation, surgical oophorectomy, or triptorelin.
N4-9: 4´ EC +3´ CMF.
HR-positive patients enrolled after protocol amendment.
Patients younger than 50 years.
CMF/anthracycline containing/others.
Ovarian radiation, surgical oophorectomy, or LHRH agonist (triptorelin or leuprorelin acetate).
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; DFS, disease-free survival; HR, hormone receptor; LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; OS, overall survival; CAF, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, 5-fluorouracil; FEC, 5- fluorouracil, epirubicin, cyclophosphamide; CMF, cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5 fluorouracil; OAS, ovarian ablation or suppression; ER, estrogen-receptor; EFS, event-free survival.
Figure 1TEXT study description.
Notes: OFS achieved using triptorelin 3.75 mg every 28 days. Bilateral oophorectomy or ovarian irradiation was allowed at least 6 months of triptorelin after randomization. Optional chemotherapy: if administered was started concomitantly with triptorelin followed by oral endocrine therapy after the completion of chemotherapy. If chemotherapy was not administered, oral endocrine therapy was started 6–8 weeks after the initiation of triptorelin.
Abbreviations: EBC, early breast cancer; HR, hormone receptor; OFS, ovarian function suppression; TEXT, Tamoxifen and Exemestane Trial.
Figure 2SOFT trial study description.
Notes: OFS achieved using triptorelin 3.75 mg every 28 days, bilateral oophorectomy or ovarian irradiation. Patients randomized to receive endocrine therapy ± OFS between 12 weeks of surgery or within 8 months of neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
Abbreviations: EBC, early breast cancer; HR, hormone receptor; OFS, ovarian function suppression; SOFT, Suppression of Ovarian Function Trial.
Ovarian function suppression and outcome results
| Author | Year | Patients (n) | Treatment arms | DFS (%) | HR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pagani et al | 2017 | 4690 | Exemestane + OFS | 86.8 | 0.77 (0.67–0.90) | 0.0006 |
| Francis et al | 2015 | 3066 | Tamoxifen + OFS | 82.8 | 0.83 (0.66–1.04) | 0.10 |
| Lambertini et al | 2015 | 281 | CT + triptorelin | 80.5 | 1.17 (0.72–1.92) | 0.52 |
| Moore et al | 2017 | 218 | CT + goserelin | 88.0 | 0.50 (0.24–0.97) | 0.05 |
Note:
5-Year DFS.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; CT, chemotherapy; DFS, disease-free survival; HR, hazard ratio; OFS, ovarian function suppression.
Triptorelin and ovarian function preservation
| Author | Year | Patients randomized (control/experimental) | Median age, years (control/experimental) | HR status (positive/negative) | Endocrine therapy + triptorelin | Definition of POF | Timing of POF evaluation (months) | OR for POF defined as amenorrhea 1 year after the end of chemotherapy (95% CI) |
| Del Mastro et al | 2011 | 133/148 | 39/39 | 26/51 | Tamoxifen | No resumption of menses and postmenopausal levels of FSH and E2 | 12 | 0.56 (0.35–0.90) |
| Lambertini et al | 2014 | |||||||
| Munster et al | 2012 | 38/39 | 32/33 | 16/20 | Tamoxifen | No resumption of menses | 12 | 0.74 (0.21–2.58) |
| Elgindy et al | 2013 | 50/50 | 40/42 | 0/100 | – | No resumption of menses | 12 | 0.76 (0.18–3.25) |
Notes:
This study was analyzed considering the following comparisons: early chemotherapy-alone vs early chemotherapy + LHRHa + LHRH antagonist (ie, “Elgindy 1”) and delayed chemotherapy vs delayed chemotherapy + LHRHa.
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; E2, estradiol; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; HR, hormone receptor; LHRH, luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone; LHRHa, LHRH analog; POF, premature ovarian failure.