FRIDAY, April 12 (HealthDay
News) — Hot flashes and other unpleasant side effects are a major reason
one-quarter of breast cancer patients do not start or do not complete
their recommended hormone-blocking therapy, a new study finds.
Five years of daily pills —
either tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors — is recommended for many women
whose breast cancer expresses the hormones estrogen or progesterone.
The drugs have been shown to reduce the risk of cancer returning and to
extend survival.
Despite such benefits, this
study of more than 700 breast cancer patients in Detroit and Los Angeles
who were eligible for hormone therapy found that about 11 percent never
started treatment and 15 percent stopped it early.
Unpleasant, menopause-type side
effects, such as vaginal dryness, hot flashes or joint pain, were the
most common reasons women either stopped or never started the therapy.
“We need to develop better ways
of supporting women through this therapy,” lead study author
Christopher Friese, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan
School of Nursing, said in a university news release.
Those most likely to complete
their hormone therapy were patients who were most worried about their
cancer returning and those who already took medication regularly,
according to the study, which was published online March 31 in the
journal Breast Cancer Research and Treatment.
Patients least likely to begin
hormone therapy included those who received less information about
hormone therapy, which suggests that doctors need to properly educate
patients before treatment begins, the researchers said.
Women who saw a breast cancer
surgeon instead of a medical oncologist as their primary follow-up also
were less likely to begin hormone therapy.
“It was particularly
interesting that greater fear of recurrence was associated in our
patient sample with greater adherence to endocrine therapy,” study
senior study author Dr. Jennifer Griggs, a professor of internal
medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School.
“We don’t want our patients
living under a cloud of fear, so we need to develop creative ways to
both reassure and motivate them,” said Griggs, a medical oncologist.
“This means providing better education about the importance of staying
on these medications and partnering with primary care and cancer doctors
to help patients manage symptoms.”
More than 234,000 Americans
will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year and more than 40,000 will
die from the disease, the American Cancer Society estimates.
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