Adjuvant hormonal therapy for breast cancer and risk of hormone receptor-specific subtypes of contralateral breast cancer.

Compared with the breast cancer risk women in the general population have, breast cancer survivors have a substantially higher risk of developing a second primary contralateral breast cancer. Adjuvant hormonal therapy reduces this risk, but preliminary data indicate that it may also increase risk of hormone receptor-negative contralateral tumors. We conducted a population-based nested case-control study including 367 women diagnosed with both first primary estrogen receptor (ER)-positive invasive breast cancer and second primary contralateral breast cancer and 728 matched control women diagnosed only with a first breast cancer. Data on adjuvant hormonal therapy, other treatments, and breast cancer risk factors were ascertained through telephone interviews and medical record abstractions. Two-sided statistical tests using conditional logistic regression were conducted to quantify associations between adjuvant hormonal therapy and risk of hormone receptor-specific subtypes of contralateral breast cancer (n = 303 ER+ and n = 52 ER- cases). Compared with women not treated with hormonal therapy, users of adjuvant tamoxifen for >or=5 years had a reduced risk of ER+ contralateral breast cancer [odds ratio, 0.4; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.3-0.7], but a 4.4-fold (95% CI, 1.03-19.0) increased risk of ER- contralateral breast cancer. Tamoxifen use for <5 years was not associated with ER- contralateral breast cancer risk. Although adjuvant hormonal therapy has clear benefits, risk of the relatively uncommon outcome of ER- contralateral breast cancer may now need to be tallied among its risks. This is of clinical concern given the poorer prognosis of ER- compared with ER+ tumors.

[1]  M. Rossing,et al.  Hormone receptor status, tumor characteristics, and prognosis: a prospective cohort of breast cancer patients , 2007, Breast Cancer Research.

[2]  S. Hilsenbeck,et al.  Hormone receptor status of a contralateral breast cancer is independent of the receptor status of the first primary in patients not receiving adjuvant tamoxifen. , 2005, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[3]  P. Mackowiak,et al.  Concordance of the Hormone Receptors and Correlation of HER‐2/neu Overexpression of the Metachronous Cancers of Contralateral Breasts , 2005, The breast journal.

[4]  Norman Wolmark,et al.  Estrogen receptor status of primary breast cancer is predictive of estrogen receptor status of contralateral breast cancer. , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[5]  S. Koester,et al.  Tamoxifen stimulates in vivo growth of drug-resistant estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer , 2004, Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology.

[6]  Published Online First , 2004 .

[7]  A. Hart,et al.  The influence of tamoxifen treatment on the oestrogen receptor in metachronous contralateral breast cancer , 2003, British Journal of Cancer.

[8]  N. Weiss,et al.  Tamoxifen therapy for primary breast cancer and risk of contralateral breast cancer. , 2001, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[9]  W. Thompson,et al.  Epidemiology of contralateral breast cancer. , 1999, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology.

[10]  Mike Clarke,et al.  Tamoxifen for early breast cancer: an overview of the randomised trials , 1998, The Lancet.

[11]  J Isola,et al.  Loss of estrogen receptor in recurrent breast cancer is associated with poor response to endocrine therapy. , 1996, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[12]  M. Dowsett,et al.  Changes in estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and pS2 expression in tamoxifen-resistant human breast cancer. , 1995, Cancer research.

[13]  Osborne Ck Heterogeneity in hormone receptor status in primary and metastatic breast cancer. , 1985 .

[14]  C. Osborne,et al.  Heterogeneity in hormone receptor status in primary and metastatic breast cancer. , 1985, Seminars in oncology.