Efficacy and Economics of Hormonal Therapies for Advanced Breast Cancer
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Drugs & Aging
- Vol. 19 (6) , 453-463
- https://doi.org/10.2165/00002512-200219060-00004
Abstract
Breast cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related mortality among postmenopausal women in the US, and the economic burden of breast cancer care comprises a large percentage of the healthcare budget. Hormonal therapies have a proven place in the management of advanced breast cancer. This type of therapy is more likely to be used in older, compared with younger, women, because tumours in older women are more likely to express estrogen and progesterone receptors. While it is difficult to measure the costs of cancer care because of variation in extent and duration of treatment, treatment-related costs including costs of hormonal agents used for advanced disease account for a relatively small component of the overall costs. Newer hormonal regimens such as the new third generation nonsteroidal (letrozole, an-astrozole) and steroidal (exemestane) aromatase inhibitors have shown improved clinical efficacy compared with standard regimens such as megestrol and tamoxifen in the metastatic setting in terms of objective responses or time to tumour progression. In addition the newer agents have improved toxicity profiles. Cost analyses of the newer aromatase inhibitors (anastrozole and letrozole), compared with megestrol, show an optimistic outlook for these agents. Additional work needs to be done looking at a comparison of the efficacy and costs of the aromatase inhibitors relative to the currently recommended hormonal treatments used for women with metastatic breast cancer.Keywords
This publication has 93 references indexed in Scilit:
- Exemestane improves survival compared with megoestrol acetate in postmenopausal patients with advanced breast cancer who have failed on tamoxifen: results of a double-blind randomised phase III trialEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 2000
- Comprehensive Pharmacology and Clinical Efficacy of Aromatase InhibitorsDrugs, 1999
- The Economic Potential of Tamoxifen Prophylaxis in Breast CancerPharmacoEconomics, 1997
- Breast Cancer Therapies in DevelopmentDrugs, 1997
- New endocrine therapies for breast cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1996
- Should clinicians be concerned about the carcinogenic potential of tamoxifen?European Journal Of Cancer, 1994
- A Randomized Clinical Trial Evaluating Tamoxifen in the Treatment of Patients with Node-Negative Breast Cancer Who Have Estrogen-Receptor–Positive TumorsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Adjuvant tamoxifen in primary breast cancer: Influence on plasma lipids and antithrombin III levelsBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1988
- Bone mineral density in women with breast cancer treated with adjuvant tamoxifen for at least two yearsBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 1988
- Counting the costs of cancer therapyEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1982