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Measuring Ovarian Escape in Premenopausal Estrogen Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer Patients on Ovarian Suppression Therapy
Authors:Ethan Burns  Emre Koca  Jiaqiong Xu  Edward McLean  Rosetta Lee  Tejal Patel  Jenny Chang  Polly Niravath
Institution:1. Department of Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas, USA;2. Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, Houston Methodist Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA;3. Center for Outcomes Research, Houston Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Center, Houston Methodist Research Institute, Houston, Texas, USA;4. Houston Methodist Department of Pharmacy, Houston, Texas
Abstract:PurposeThis study evaluated the proportion of premenopausal women who experience persistent ovarian escape (OE) while receiving ovarian suppression (OS) therapy for estrogen receptor‐positive (ER+) breast cancer treatment. The study also examined clinical factors that may predispose to higher risk of persistent OE.Materials and MethodsThis was a retrospective, “real‐world” study to evaluate premenopausal women receiving adjuvant endocrine OS therapy. The primary objective was to measure the percentage of persistent OE within the first 3 months of OS injections (using either leuprolide or goserelin). The secondary objective was to associate baseline clinical data (age, body mass index BMI], and previous chemotherapy) with the probability of OE.ResultsOf the 46 patients included in this analysis, 11 (23.9%) women did not achieve OS within 3 months. Three women (6.5%) remained in OE at 12 months. Older age (odds ratio, 0.86; confidence interval, 0.76–0.98, p = .024) was associated with lower chance of developing OE. BMI, previous chemotherapy, and drug used (tamoxifen versus aromatase inhibitor) did not correlate with the likelihood of OE in this patient cohort.ConclusionAmong the premenopausal women who did not attain complete ovarian suppression, young age was a significant risk factor for likelihood of OE. Although the clinical relevance of this finding is not yet known, it should prompt further studies to determine whether inadequate OS is associated with higher recurrence risk for patients with ER+ breast cancer.Implications for PracticeBecause up to a quarter of premenopausal women do not attain adequate ovarian suppression within the first 3 months of gonadotropin‐releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist therapy, bloodwork should be checked to ascertain hormone levels prior to starting aromatase inhibitor therapy, and at regular intervals, for these women.
Keywords:Ovarian suppression  Ovarian escape  ER-positive breast cancer  Premenopausal
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