Lower-dose vs high-dose oral estradiol therapy of hormone receptor-positive, aromatase inhibitor-resistant advanced breast cancer: A phase 2 randomized study Journal Article


Authors: Ellis, M. J.; Gao, F.; Dehdashti, F.; Jeffe, D. B.; Marcom, P. K.; Carey, L. A.; Dickler, M. N.; Silverman, P.; Fleming, G. F.; Kommareddy, A.; Jamalabadi-Majidi, S.; Crowder, R.; Siegel, B. A.
Article Title: Lower-dose vs high-dose oral estradiol therapy of hormone receptor-positive, aromatase inhibitor-resistant advanced breast cancer: A phase 2 randomized study
Abstract: Context: Estrogen deprivation therapy with aromatase inhibitors has been hypothesized to paradoxically sensitize hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer tumor cells to low-dose estradiol therapy. Objective: To determine whether 6 mg of estradiol (daily) is a viable therapy for postmenopausal women with advanced aromatase inhibitor-resistant hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Design, Setting, and Patients: A phase 2 randomized trial of 6 mg vs 30 mg of oral estradiol used daily (April 2004-February 2008 [enrollment closed]). Eligible patients (66 randomized) had metastatic breast cancer treated with an aromatase inhibitor with progression-free survival (≥24 wk) or relapse (after ≥2 y) of adjuvant aromatase inhibitor use. Patients at high risk of estradiol-related adverse events were excluded. Patients were examined after 1 and 2 weeks for clinical and laboratory toxicities and flare reactions and thereafter every 4 weeks. Tumor radiological assessment occurred every 12 weeks. At least 1 measurable lesion or 4 measurable lesions (bone-only disease) were evaluated for tumor response. Intervention: Randomization to receive 1 oral 2-mg generic estradiol tablet 3 times daily or five 2-mg tablets 3 times daily. Main Outcome Measures: Primary end point: clinical benefit rate (response plus stable disease at 24 weeks). Secondary outcomes: toxicity, progression-free survival, time to treatment failure, quality of life, and the predictive properties of the metabolic flare reaction detected by positron emission tomography/computed tomography with fluorodeoxyglucose F 18. Results: The adverse event rate (≥ grade 3) in the 30-mg group (11/32 [34%]; 95% confidence interval [CI], 23%-47%) was higher than in the 6-mg group (4/34 [18%]; 95% CI, 5%-22%; P = .03). Clinical benefit rates were 9 of 32 (28%; 95% CI, 18%-41%) in the 30-mg group and 10 of 34 (29%; 95% CI, 19%-42%) in the 6-mg group. An estradiol-stimulated increase in fluorodeoxyglucose F 18 uptake (≥ 12% prospectively defined) was predictive of response (positive predictive value, 80%; 95% CI, 61%-92%). Seven patients with estradiol-sensitive disease were re-treated with aromatase inhibitors at estradiol progression, among which 2 had partial response and 1 had stable disease, suggesting resensitization to estrogen deprivation. Conclusions In women with advanced breast cancer and acquired resistance to aromatase inhibitors, a daily dose of 6 mg of estradiol provided a similar clinical benefit rate as 30 mg, with fewer serious adverse events. The efficacy of treatment with the lower dose should be further examined in phase 3 clinical trials. Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00324259. ©2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Keywords: cancer survival; controlled study; treatment outcome; treatment response; survival analysis; major clinical study; clinical trial; advanced cancer; drug dose comparison; drug efficacy; side effect; unspecified side effect; cancer adjuvant therapy; cancer patient; drug megadose; outcome assessment; positron emission tomography; radiopharmaceuticals; biological markers; low drug dose; progression free survival; quality of life; computer assisted tomography; controlled clinical trial; infection; pain; phase 2 clinical trial; breast cancer; nausea; randomized controlled trial; vomiting; aromatase inhibitor; estrogen therapy; estrogens; hypercalcemia; drug resistance, neoplasm; breast neoplasms; prediction; high risk patient; cancer hormone therapy; confidence interval; thrombosis; fluorodeoxyglucose f 18; fluorodeoxyglucose f18; positron-emission tomography; predictive value of tests; tamoxifen; cancer relapse; pleura effusion; therapy effect; receptors, estrogen; antineoplastic agents, hormonal; embolism; estrogen receptor; progesterone receptor; breast metastasis; drug treatment failure; postmenopause; estradiol; sodium; brain ischemia; sodium blood level; aromatase inhibitors; insulin-like growth factor i
Journal Title: JAMA - Journal of the American Medical Association
Volume: 302
Issue: 7
ISSN: 0098-7484
Publisher: American Medical Association  
Date Published: 2009-08-19
Start Page: 774
End Page: 780
Language: English
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2009.1204
PUBMED: 19690310
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3460383
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 10" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: JAMAA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Maura N Dickler
    263 Dickler