Literature DB >> 8313498

Tamoxifen therapy in breast cancer control worldwide.

R R Love1, V Koroltchouk.   

Abstract

In most developed and many developing countries, breast cancer is the most frequent cancer and the leading cause of cancer death among women. At least 50% of all breast cancer patients worldwide would survive longer, however, if public awareness about and early detection of the condition were increased and greater use were made of efficient treatment of proven value. With early-stage, localized breast cancer, local treatment combined with adjuvant hormonal therapy with tamoxifen, a synthetic estrogen, could save the lives of 6 women out of 100 compared with local treatment alone. Tamoxifen has anti-estrogenic effects not only on breast cancer cells but also on liver metabolism and bone, with concomitant decreases in risk factors for chronic skeletal and vascular system diseases. Long-term tamoxifen treatment causes major adverse clinical effects in < 5% of women; menopausal and vasomotor symptoms occur in the majority of treated women, but their severity lessens over time. Tamoxifen is being considered as a standard therapy and is included in the WHO list of essential drugs for the treatment of breast cancer patients in both developing and developed countries. For the control of breast cancer more successfully worldwide, one challenge is to make tamoxifen therapy available to greater numbers of women.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8313498      PMCID: PMC2393525     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull World Health Organ        ISSN: 0042-9686            Impact factor:   9.408


  7 in total

Review 1.  The control of breast cancer. A World Health Organization perspective.

Authors:  V Koroltchouk; K Stanley; J Stjernswärd
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  1990-06-15       Impact factor: 6.860

2.  Canadian National Breast Screening Study: 1. Breast cancer detection and death rates among women aged 40 to 49 years.

Authors:  A B Miller; C J Baines; T To; C Wall
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1992-11-15       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  Canadian National Breast Screening Study: 2. Breast cancer detection and death rates among women aged 50 to 59 years.

Authors:  A B Miller; C J Baines; T To; C Wall
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1992-11-15       Impact factor: 8.262

4.  Fatal myocardial infarction in the Scottish adjuvant tamoxifen trial. The Scottish Breast Cancer Committee.

Authors:  C C McDonald; H J Stewart
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1991-08-24

Review 5.  Potential role of tamoxifen in prevention of breast cancer.

Authors:  S G Nayfield; J E Karp; L G Ford; F A Dorr; B S Kramer
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  1991-10-16       Impact factor: 13.506

6.  Estimates of the worldwide incidence of eighteen major cancers in 1985.

Authors:  D M Parkin; P Pisani; J Ferlay
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  1993-06-19       Impact factor: 7.396

Review 7.  Tamoxifen therapy in primary breast cancer: biology, efficacy, and side effects.

Authors:  R R Love
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  1989-06       Impact factor: 44.544

  7 in total
  2 in total

Review 1.  Targeting signal transduction for disease therapy.

Authors:  A Levitzki
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  1997-06       Impact factor: 3.064

Review 2.  Current State of Breast Cancer Diagnosis, Treatment, and Theranostics.

Authors:  Arya Bhushan; Andrea Gonsalves; Jyothi U Menon
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2021-05-14       Impact factor: 6.321

  2 in total

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