Long-Term Effects of Adjuvant Tamoxifen and/or Radiotherapy: The South Sweden Breast Cancer Trial

Authors

  • Stefan Rydén Dept of Surgery, Angel- holm Hospital, s-262 81 Angelholm, Sweden
  • MÅRten Fernö
  • Torgil Möller
  • Knut Aspegren
  • Lars Bergljung
  • Dick Killander
  • Torsten Landberg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869209088914

Keywords:

Breast cancer, adjuvant therapy, radiotherapy, tamoxifen

Abstract

In a multicenter trial of adjuvant therapy in stage II breast cancer, 719 postmenopausal patients were randomized to one of three treatment regimens: radiotherapy only or in combination with adjuvant tamoxifen for one year, or adjuvant tamoxifen without radiotherapy. At twelve years of follow-up (median 9 years), no statistically significant differences in survival or recurrence-free survival were observed. However, the rate of loco-regional recurrency was lower among patients treated with both radiotherapy and tamoxifen. The rate of bilateral breast cancer was reduced in tamoxifen-treated patients whereas the rate of new primary malignancies other than breast cancer was somewhat higher in tamoxifen-treated patients. Adjuvant therapy in breast cancer may influence not only breast cancer recurrences and mortality but also later disease patterns and cause-specific mortality.

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Published

1992-01-01

How to Cite

Rydén, S., Fernö, M., Möller, T., Aspegren, K., Bergljung, L., Killander, D., & Landberg, T. (1992). Long-Term Effects of Adjuvant Tamoxifen and/or Radiotherapy: The South Sweden Breast Cancer Trial. Acta Oncologica, 31(2), 271–274. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869209088914