Duration of Adjuvant Aromatase Inhibitor Therapy in Postmenopausal Breast Cancer

SUMMARY: Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the US and about 1 in 8 women (12%) will develop invasive breast cancer during their lifetime. Approximately 284,200 new cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed in 2021 and about 44,130 individuals will die of the disease, largely due to metastatic recurrence.

Luminal breast cancer is the most prevalent molecular subtype in postmenopausal females, accounting for over 70%. Despite substantial improvements in adjuvant therapies, the risk of disease recurrence continues indefinitely, with more than half the recurrences occurring after the first 5 years following diagnosis. Following initial adjuvant endocrine therapy with Tamoxifen for 5 years, the addition of extended adjuvant therapy has resulted in 40% longer Disease Free Survival (DFS), when compared to placebo or no extended therapy. However the benefit of extending adjuvant Aromatase Inhibitor therapy for 5 years beyond the initial 5-year duration regimen is less well established. Further, the most effective duration of such extended adjuvant endocrine therapy remains unclear. Added to this dilemma are the side effects associated with Aromatase Inhibitor therapy including hot flushes, arthralgia, and bone pain, as well as treatment-induced osteoporosis, which can have a significant impact on patient’s quality of life. Researchers in the Secondary Adjuvant Long-Term Study with Arimidex [Anastrozole] (SALSA) prospectively investigated whether an additional 2 years or 5 years of Anastrozole therapy would result in better outcomes, following the initial 5 years of endocrine therapy, in postmenopausal women with Hormone Receptor-positive breast cancer.

The authors conducted a prospective, multicenter, randomized, Phase III trial, which included 3,470 eligible postmenopausal women with Stages I, II or III early stage breast cancer with no evidence of recurrence. Enrolled patients had invasive Hormone Receptor-positive breast cancer, and had received 5 years (plus or minus 12 months) of adjuvant endocrine therapy with Tamoxifen, Aromatase Inhibitors, or both sequentially, up until 12 months before randomization. Patients were randomly assigned 1:1 to receive Anastrozole 1 mg, orally daily, for either 2 additional years for a total of 7 years (N=1732) or 5 additional years for a total of 10 years (N=1738). The two treatment groups were well balanced. The median age at the time of randomization was 64 years, 72% of patients had tumors that were smaller than 2 cm, 66% had node-negative disease, and 19% had high-grade tumors. Stratification criteria included pathological tumor stage, pathological node stage, primary adjuvant endocrine therapy and adjuvant chemotherapy.

The primary analysis included all the patients who were still participating in the study (N=3208), including 1,603 in the 2-year group versus 1,605 in the 5-year group. In the primary analysis population of 3208 patients, 51% had received Tamoxifen alone for the initial 5 years, 7.3% had received an Aromatase Inhibitor alone, and 41.7% had received an Aromatase Inhibitor in combination with Tamoxifen. The Primary end point was Disease Free Survival (DFS). Secondary end points were Overall Survival (OS), contralateral breast cancer, second primary cancer, and clinical bone fracture. The median follow-up after randomization was 118 months.

The researchers observed no difference in DFS with 2 versus 5 additional years of adjuvant endocrine therapy with Anastrozole. The DFS 10 years since randomization was 73.6% in the 2-year group versus 73.9% in the 5-year group (HR=0.99; P=0.90). Contralateral breast cancer occurred in 2.2% versus 2.1% of patients (HR= 1.15), and local recurrence occurred in 3% versus 2.4% in the 2 year and 5 year groups, respectively. There was no difference noted for Overall Survival at 8 years between the two treatment groups (87.5% in the 2-year group and 87.3% in the 5-year group, HR for death from any cause=1.02). The risk of clinical bone fracture however was higher in the 5-year group than in the 2-year group (HR=1.35).

It was concluded from this study that in postmenopausal women with Hormone Receptor positive breast cancer who had received 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy, extending endocrine therapy with an Aromatase Inhibitor by an additional 5 years provided no benefit over a 2-year extension, but was associated with a greater risk of bone fracture.

Duration of Adjuvant Aromatase-Inhibitor Therapy in Postmenopausal Breast Cancer. Gnant M, Fitzal F, Rinnerthaler G, et al. N Engl J Med 2021; 385:395-405.