Published: 14/09/2008 - PDF Version (75 KB)
Taxotere on top of standard chemo regimen improves survival in early stage breast cancer
For patients with early stage breast cancer spread to the lymph nodes, adding four cycles of docetaxel (taxotere) into a sequential regimen of epirubicin followed by cyclophosphamide, methotrexate and fluorouracil (CMF) reduces the risk of recurrence and death, updated long-term results show.
This advantage comes at the cost of an increased, but manageable, toxicity, Italian researchers report at the 33rd Congress of the European Society for Medical Oncology in Stockholm this weekend.
Dr. Francesco Cognetti from Istituto Oncologico Regina Elena and colleagues treated 998 patients with node-positive early stage breast cancer with one of two regimens: 486 received four months of treatment with epirubicin, followed by four cycles of treatment with CMF. The remainder received an additional docetaxel treatment between the two chemotherapy stages.
At the congress, Dr. Cognetti reports results from a median follow-up of 62 months, showing a disease-free survival rate of 74% in the docetaxel arm, compared to 68% among women treated with the other regimen.
ìAt a median follow-up of five years, the overall survival of patients receiving the addition of docetaxel to the standard regimen of epirubicin followed by CMF significantly improved compared to patients randomized in the control arm,î he said. ìMoreover, the time of disease recurrence results significantly longer in patients enrolled in the experimental arm.î
ìThe trial demonstrates that the introduction of four cycles of docetaxel into a sequential epirubicin-CMF regimen reduces the risk of recurrence and death in node-positive breast cancer patients.î
No comments have been posted yet. Post a comment.

Intensive chemotherapy may be harmful to most older patients with AML
New molecular marker could predict if breast cancer patients need chemotherapy
CTC screening for colorectal cancer not cost-effective when reimbursed at same rate as colonoscopy
Women in their forties have lower mammographic tumour detectability
Genetic risk score associated with breast cancer risk
New roundtable debate: communicating risk in familial cancer
Study finds that the GRB7 gene drives an aggressive form of the disease
ASCO updates guideline on adjuvant hormonal therapy for breast cancer
NICE guideline set to improve care of cancer patients with unknown primary