Tamoxifen treatment reverses the adverse effects of chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure on serum lipids

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Abstract

In all, 146 premenopausal women with early stage breast cancer were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. In addition, 5-year tamoxifen treatment was started after chemotherapy to those 112 patients with hormone-receptor-positive tumours while those with hormone-receptor-negative tumours received no further therapy. The serum lipid levels were followed in both groups. The levels of serum total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol increased significantly after chemotherapy only in patients who developed ovarian dysfunction. Total cholesterol increased +9.5% and LDL cholesterol +16.6% in patients who developed amenorrhoea (P<0.00001 and 0.00001, respectively). The cholesterol levels did not change in patients who preserved regular menstruation after chemotherapy. After 6 months of tamoxifen therapy, the total cholesterol decreased -9.7% and the LDL cholesterol -16.7% from levels after the chemotherapy, while the cholesterol concentrations remained at increased levels in the control group (P=0.001 and P<0.0001, respectively). The high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels did not change significantly in either tamoxifen or control group. The effects of tamoxifen treatment on serum lipids after chemotherapy have not been studied before. Our current study suggests that adjuvant tamoxifen therapy reverses the adverse effects of chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure on total and LDL cholesterol and even lowers their serum levels below the baseline. © 2004 Cancer Research UK.

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Vehmanen, L., Saarto, T., Blomqvist, C., Taskinen, M. R., & Elomaa, I. (2004). Tamoxifen treatment reverses the adverse effects of chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure on serum lipids. British Journal of Cancer, 91(3), 476–481. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6601979

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