DGNews
CHICAGO, IL -- March 1, 2005 -- Age alone should not prohibit the use of
chemotherapy regimens in older women with breast cancer who are otherwise in
good general health, according to a study in the March 2 issue of JAMA.
"The incidence of breast cancer increases with increasing age, and almost half
of all new breast cancers in the United States occur in women 65 years of age or
older," the authors note in background information in the article. "Systemic
adjuvant (secondary treatment) chemotherapy in women with early-stage breast
cancer significantly improves both relapse-free and overall survival in women
aged 50 to 69 years old, but data are lacking for women aged 70 years or older."
The authors add that available data suggest that adjuvant chemotherapy may be
significantly underused in older patients or that inappropriate dose reductions
are made that decrease its effectiveness.
Hyman B. Muss, M.D., from the Vermont Cancer Center, Burlington, Vt., and
investigators from the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) analyzed data from
four randomized clinical trials of treatments for lymph node-positive breast
cancer cases between 1975 and 1999. These trials compared more aggressive with
less aggressive chemotherapy regimens. A total of 6, 487 women with lymph
node-positive breast cancer were included in the trials; 542 (8 percent) of the
patients were 65 years or older and 159 (2 percent) were 70 years or older.
"Smaller tumor size, fewer positive lymph nodes, more chemotherapy, and
tamoxifen (drug used to treat breast cancer) use were all significantly related
to longer disease-free and overall survival," the authors found in their
analyses of the studies. "There was no association between age and disease-free
survival. Overall survival was significantly worse or patients aged 65 or older
because of death from causes other than breast cancer. Thirty-three deaths (0.5
percent of all patients) were attributed to treatment, and older women had
higher treatment-related mortality. Older women and younger women derived
similar reductions in breast cancer mortality and recurrence from regimens
containing more chemotherapy."
"Our study adds to the increasing number of trials that suggest that older
patients in fair to good health tolerate standard chemotherapy regimens, and
even more intensive regimens, almost as well as younger patients," the
researchers write. "A sobering finding from this analysis is the observation
that only 8 percent of patients entered in the trials analyzed in this study
were aged 65 years or older; about 50 percent of new breast cancer diagnoses
occur in women in the older age group." In conclusion the authors write, "the
data from this study should help to encourage clinicians to offer healthy older
patients participation in newer trials, because healthy older patients are
likely to derive similar treatment benefits as younger patients."