Breast Cancer Prevention Trials: Large and Small Trials

被引:15
|
作者
Arun, Banu [1 ]
Dunn, Barbara K. [2 ]
Ford, Leslie G. [2 ]
Ryan, Anne [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas MD Anderson Canc Ctr, Houston, TX 77030 USA
[2] US Natl Canc Inst, Canc Prevent Div, Bethesda, MD USA
关键词
SURGICAL ADJUVANT BREAST; AROMATASE INHIBITOR EXEMESTANE; POSTMENOPAUSAL WOMEN; RANDOMIZED-TRIAL; BOWEL PROJECT; TAMOXIFEN TREATMENT; COMBINATION TRIAL; ATAC ARIMIDEX; LETROZOLE; RISK;
D O I
10.1053/j.seminoncol.2010.05.004
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the United States, with 192,870 new cases and 40,170 deaths due to this disease estimated to have occurred 2009. An emphasis on prevention has been increasing in view of a persisting high incidence of disease. Seventy percent of breast cancers are estrogen receptor (ER)-positive, and are therefore presumed to be hormone-responsive and potentially treatable or preventable by anti-estrogenic agents. To date, the large, phase III randomized controlled breast cancer prevention trials have tested and are testing only hormonal drugs designed to antagonize the carcinogenic effect of endogenous estrogen; these agents are either selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) or aromatase inhibitors (AIs). The SERMs, tamoxifen and raloxifene, have been shown in these large trials to reduce the risk of ER-positive breast cancers; prevention trials of AIs are ongoing. Interest is now focusing on developing agents with a broader spectrum of preventive activity, particularly with regard to ER-negative subtypes of breast cancer. A number of phase I and II trials using tissue-derived surrogate endpoint biomarkers (SEBs) as outcomes have been implemented. These smaller trials address prevention not only of ER-negative but also ER-positive breast cancers, since approximately 50% of the latter have been shown to be resistant to the estrogen-targeting drugs used in the large trials. Issues of importance in these smaller trials include choice of agent, selection of appropriate trial participants, trial design, method of access to breast tissue in women without cancer, selection and monitoring of SEBs, and monitoring of drug toxicity. © 2010 Published by Elsevier Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:367 / 383
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] BREAST-CANCER TRIALS
    不详
    LANCET, 1979, 1 (8111): : 339 - 339
  • [42] Neurology - Small channels and large trials
    Wokke, JHJ
    van Gijn, J
    LANCET, 1997, 350 : SIII14 - SIII14
  • [43] SMALL VERSUS LARGE CARDIOVASCULAR TRIALS
    SLEIGHT, P
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 1990, 183 (01) : 155 - 156
  • [44] CAN METAANALYSIS OF MANY SMALL TRIALS SUBSTITUTE FOR PERFORMING LARGE TRIALS
    LEVIN, HR
    SACKS, HS
    CHALMERS, TC
    CLINICAL RESEARCH, 1986, 34 (02): : A635 - A635
  • [45] THE AUSTRALIA NEW ZEALAND BREAST CANCER TRIALS GROUP: SOME CONTRIBUTIONS TO BREAST CANCER TRIALS
    Forbes, John F.
    CANCER FORUM, 2006, 30 (02) : 118 - 120
  • [46] Exercise trials in cancer prevention.
    McTiernan, A
    CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY BIOMARKERS & PREVENTION, 2004, 13 (11) : 1970S - 1970S
  • [47] Prevention and Intervention Trials for Colorectal Cancer
    Komiya, Masami
    Fujii, Gen
    Takahashi, Mami
    Iigo, Masaaki
    Mutoh, Michihiro
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2013, 43 (07) : 685 - 694
  • [48] THE IMPORTANCE AND NATURE OF CANCER PREVENTION TRIALS
    BYAR, DP
    FREEDMAN, LS
    SEMINARS IN ONCOLOGY, 1990, 17 (04) : 413 - 424
  • [49] Are large simple trials for dementia prevention possible?
    Whiteley, William N.
    Anand, Sonia
    Bangdiwala, Shrikant, I
    Bosch, Jackie
    Canavan, Michelle
    Chertkow, Howard
    Gerstein, Hertzel C.
    Gorelick, Philip
    O'Donnell, Martin
    Pare, Guillaume
    Pigeyre, Marie
    Seshadri, Sudha
    Sharma, Mike
    Smith, Eric E.
    Williamson, Jeff
    Cukierman-Yaffe, Tali
    Hart, Robert G.
    Yusuf, Salim
    AGE AND AGEING, 2020, 49 (02) : 154 - 160
  • [50] THE CONTRIBUTION OF LARGE, SIMPLE TRIALS TO PREVENTION RESEARCH
    BURING, JE
    HENNEKENS, CH
    PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 1994, 23 (05) : 595 - 598