Patient-reported outcomes from MA.17R: A randomized trial of extending adjuvant letrozole for 5 years after completing an initial 5 years of aromatase inhibitor therapy alone or preceded by tamoxifen in postmenopausal women with early-stage breast cancer. Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • LBA506 Background: MA.17R is a Canadian Cancer Trials Group (CCTG) led phase III randomized controlled trial comparing letrozole to placebo after 5 years of aromatase inhibitor (AI) as adjuvant therapy for hormone-receptor positive breast cancer. The primary endpoint was disease-free survival. Quality of life (QOL) was a secondary endpoint. Methods: QOL was measured with the SF-36 (2 summary scores and 8 domains) and menopause-specific QOL (MENQOL) (4 symptom domains) at baseline and every 12 months (mo) up to 60 mo. QOL assessment was mandatory for CCTG centres but optional to centres in other groups. Mean change scores from baseline were calculated at 12 and 36 mo. Between-arm differences were assessed with the Wilcoxon test. Results: 1918 patients were randomized and 1428 patients completed the baseline QOL assessment. Compliance with QOL measures was over 85%. Baseline summary scores for SF-36 physical (PCS, 47.5 for letrozole and 47.9 for placebo) and mental (MCS, 55.5 for letrozole and 54.8 for placebo) were close to population norms (50). No differences were seen between groups in mean change scores for the SF-36 PCS and MCS and the other 8 QOL domains. Patients randomized to letrozole reported worse vasomotor symptoms (12 mo p = 0.02, 36 mo p = 0.03) and worse sexual functioning (12 mo p = 0.01, 36 mo p = 0.01). Further analyses with follow up to 60 months will be presented. Conclusions: No differences were seen in overall QOL measured by the SF 36 summary measures between letrozole and placebo groups. Differences existed for vasomotor symptoms and sexual functioning which were worse in the letrozole group and attributed to improvements in mean scores seen for women randomized to placebo. The data indicate that continuation of AI therapy after 5 years prior treatment is not associated with a deterioration of overall QOL. Treatment related vasomotor and sexual functioning alterations occur with ongoing treatment. Clinical trial information: NCT00754845.

authors

  • Lemieux, Julie
  • Goss, Paul E
  • Parulekar, Wendy R
  • Ingle, James N
  • Pritchard, Kathleen I
  • Robert, Nicholas J
  • Muss, Hyman
  • Gralow, Julie
  • Strasser-Weippl, Kathrin
  • Brundage, Michael Donald
  • Whelan, Kate
  • Tu, Dongsheng
  • Whelan, Timothy

publication date

  • June 20, 2016