ANNOUNCER: There are three drugs in this class: Arimidex, Femara, and Aromasin.
Arimidex has been approved for adjuvant use against all types of breast cancers including early-stage disease, when the cancer has not spread beyond the breast. Femara is approved for locally advanced cancer and metastatic cancer. And Aromasin has been approved for use against metastatic cancer if tamoxifen has proved ineffective.
Studies have been going on for several years to see whether the benefits of hormone therapy can be carried even further with the use of aromatase inhibitors in post-menopausal women. In all of these studies, the aromatase inhibitors showed an improvement in reducing the risk of recurrence. This was true at all of the time points studied: women who took the aromatase inhibitors immediately after surgery, ones who switched from tamoxifen to the aromatase inhibitors after some number of years -- so-called sequencing of hormonal therapy -- and women who added aromatase inhibitors after completing five years of tamoxifen. The aromatase inhibitors have been shown to improve upon the benefits that have already been seen with tamoxifen and should be incorporated into the care of all postmenopausal women with early stage breast cancer.
ANNOUNCER: Since the type of treatment is dependant on finding out whether breast cancer is hormone receptor positive, testing for this factor is something that's done very early on.
STEVEN JONES, MD: Once a biopsy is done, any type of biopsy, might be a needle biopsy, might be removal of a mass and there's breast cancer present, the test can be done on that tissue. So the pathologist is the one that will do those tests. And it's absolutely standard in this country to get that kind of information.
So that's certainly a question a woman could ask early on. If, for some reason, they haven't done it, they need to go back and do the test.
LAWRENCE WICKERHAM, MD: When we have cancers that have hormone receptors present, it almost universally results in consideration of adjuvant therapies that involve hormonal treatments. The specifics of which therapy and for how long can vary from individual to individual. But in somebody who has no hormone receptor present, then the concept of using hormonal therapies is off the table.
ANNOUNCER: While finding out there is breast cancer is never good news, identifying the hormone receptor status of the cancer might open up many more effective treatments for women.
STEVEN JONES, MD:Using hormonal therapy for five years and it's kind of a standard right now is one of the most important things we do for our patients. Sometimes it is the most important thing to improve the cure rate. So I do everything I can to get that patient to stay on there.