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Clinical Oncology/Epidemiology

A dose-comparative endocrine-clinical study of leuprorelin in premenopausal breast cancer patients

  • Clinical Oncology/Epidemiology
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Abstract

Twelve premenopausal patients with advanced breast cancer were randomised to receive 3.75 or 7.5 mg of a slow release formulation of the luteinising hormone releasing hormone agonist leuprorelin once every 4 weeks. All patients were oestrogen receptor positive or unknown. Serum levels of gonadotrophins and oestrogens were suppressed markedly by both doses. All oestrogen values during treatment were within the postmenopausal range except for a single oestradiol level (274 pmol l-1) in one patient on the lower dose. There was no other indication that this lower dose was less effective as an oestrogen suppressant. There were two objective responders to the 3.75 mg dose and three to the 7.5 mg dose. Toxicity was confined almost entirely to hot flushes which occurred in 11/12 patients. We conclude that the slow release formulation of leuprorelin is effective in breast cancer treatment and that there is no major detriment to the use of the 3.75 rather than 7.5 mg dose.

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Dowsett, M., Mehta, A., Mansi, J. et al. A dose-comparative endocrine-clinical study of leuprorelin in premenopausal breast cancer patients. Br J Cancer 62, 834–837 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1990.388

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1990.388

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