| Literature DB >> 7046412 |
J N Ingle, D L Ahmann, S J Green, J H Edmonson, E T Creagan, R G Hahn, J Rubin.
Abstract
Fifty-five women with progressive metastatic breast cancer who were paramenopausal (1 to less than 5 years since last menstrual period) or castrated were randomized to receive either megestrol acetate (150 mg/m2 daily in three divided doses) or tamoxifen (10 mg twice daily). The regression rate (complete plus partial) was higher for tamoxifen (26%) than for megestrol acetate (14%), but not significantly so. Analysis of time to treatment failure showed no significant difference (medians: megestrol acetate, 65 days; tamoxifen, 58 days). There was survival advantage associated with megestrol acetate (P = 0.02 after adjustment for stratification factors) that is difficult to interpret given the results of analysis of regression and time to treatment failure for the two agents.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 7046412 DOI: 10.1097/00000421-198204000-00062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Clin Oncol ISSN: 0277-3732 Impact factor: 2.339