| Literature DB >> 6756509 |
C A Hubay, O H Pearson, J S Marshall, T A Stellato, R S Rhodes, S M DeBanne, J Rosenblatt, E G Mansour, R E Hermann, J C Jones, W J Flynn, C Eckert, W L McGuire.
Abstract
A prospective, randomized clinical trial of adjuvant treatment of 318 stage II breast cancer patients, using chemotherapy, the antiestrogen tamoxifen, and immunotherapy is reported at 48 months follow-up. Women whose primary tumors have no estrogen receptors fall into a significantly poorer prognostic group than those whose tumors contain estrogen receptors. None of the adjuvant regimens appeared to offer any clear-cut advantage for the estrogen receptor negative patients. Those women whose primary tumor contains estrogen receptors appear to be in a prognostically favorable group, when their treatment regimen included the antiestrogen, tamoxifen. The adjuvant use of BCG immunotherapy does not appear to offer additional benefit, but the follow-up period of these treated patients is too brief to be conclusive. A longer period of observation is needed to determine whether this systemic treatment in estrogen receptor positive patients is preventing recurrence or merely delaying it.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 6756509 DOI: 10.1007/bf01807895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res Treat ISSN: 0167-6806 Impact factor: 4.872