Impact of visceral metastasis on efficacy of fulvestrant in patients with hormone receptor-positive recurrent breast cancer

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Abstract

Background: Previous studies have suggested that the presence of visceral metastasis is a parameter useful in predicting the treatment efficacy of fulvestrant in patients with advanced breast cancer. Patients and Methods: We retrospectively examined the association between treatment efficacy and presence of visceral metastasis in 75 patients with hormone receptor-positive recurrent breast cancer who were treated with fulvestrant or no more than five lines of other endocrine monotherapy after recurrence. Results: Nineteen patients received fulvestrant, 10 of whom had visceral metastasis. The median time to progression was 4 months for the overall study population; it was significantly longer for patients with non-visceral metastasis (5.4 months; 95% confidence interval=3.7-11.2 months) than for those with visceral metastasis (3.3 months; 95% confidence interval, 0.4-5.3 months; p=0.01). No differences in time to progression were found between the groups of patients with visceral metastasis and non-visceral metastasis who underwent other endocrine therapies. Conclusion: Fulvestrant is more effective for patients with non-visceral metastasis of recurrent breast cancer with than for those with visceral metastasis.

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Koi, Y., Koga, C., Akiyoshi, S., Masuda, T., Ijichi, H., Nakamura, Y., … Tokunaga, E. (2018). Impact of visceral metastasis on efficacy of fulvestrant in patients with hormone receptor-positive recurrent breast cancer. Anticancer Research, 38(3), 1579–1584. https://doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.12387

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