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Adjuvant capecitabine adds no advantage to bisphosphonate in elderly breast cancer patients


 

AT SABCS 2014

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SAN ANTONIO – The combination of capecitabine plus the bisphosphonate ibandronate didn’t improve disease-free survival in elderly women with moderate- or high-risk breast cancers.

After 5 years, there was an absolute – but nonsignificant – difference of 3.8% in favor of the combination treatment, Dr. Gunter von Minckwitz said at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. “But thereafter, the survival curves crossed and there was no statistically significant difference between the groups.”

But the results of the 5-year Ibandronate with or without Capecitabine for Elderly Patients with Early Breast Cancer (ICE) trial do suggest that women older than 65 years can tolerate a complete chemotherapy regimen quite well, and shouldn’t be denied the chance to receive such treatment, Dr. von Minckwitz, chair of the German Breast Group , said during his presentation.

Dr. Gunter von Minckwitz Michele G. Sullivan/Frontline Medical News

Dr. Gunter von Minckwitz

“We still see a large fraction of elderly patients who are not getting appropriate treatment. These women were about 71 years old at the beginning of this study, and after 5 years, 90% are still surviving. This shows us that the life expectancy of these patients is long. This is important information when treatment decisions are being made in these patients, who have perhaps not been considered fit enough to receive adjuvant chemotherapy, including endocrine treatment,” he said.

Investigators randomized 1,358 women aged 65 years or older to either ibandronate alone or ibandronate plus capecitabine. In each arm, patients and their physicians could decide on the ibandronate delivery mode – either 50 mg daily or 6 mg intravenously, delivered every 4 weeks. Capecitabine was delivered in six cycles of 2,000 mg/m2 daily on days 1 and 4, followed by thrice weekly for six cycles in conjunction with the preferred ibandronate schedule. Both treatments continued for 2 years.

The patients were a mean of 71 years, with 25% being at least 75 years. About 10% had a Charlson comorbidity score of at least 2. About 20% of the tumors were HER2-positive, and 15%, triple negative. Most (80%) were hormone-receptor positive. About 3/4 of the cohort had only been treated with an aromatase inhibitor.

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