The Riverside Press-Enterprise

ASK DR. ROACH Tamoxifen risks must be weighed

- Contact Dr. Roach at Toyourgood­health@med. cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH

>> I had been on hormone replacemen­t therapy for 20 years or so and was diagnosed with breast cancer last year. I had a lumpectomy

(stage 1) and radiation (external, five days a week for 21 treatments). Now, the oncologist is saying I need to start taking tamoxifen indefinite­ly. I have read online that it can cause memory loss, liver injury, stroke, blood clots and/or endometria­l cancer. What are the chances of any of these happening? These possibilit­ies seem potentiall­y worse than the original cancer spreading.

— E.H.

DEAR E.H. >> Tamoxifen for breast cancer is indeed associated with a risk of serious medical issues, but you need to consider the benefits as well.

Memory loss was seen in some studies of tamoxifen. Verbal memory was decreased in one study (by about 0.2 points on a 45-point scale), and executive function speed was reduced by about 0.2 seconds. These results were statistica­lly significan­t but small.

Women with breast cancer may develop fatty liver disease on tamoxifen treatment. This rarely causes symptoms and does not seem to increase the risk of severe liver damage. The risk can be reduced by about 50% through exercise.

Because tamoxifen acts like an estrogen in some ways, the risk of blood clots and stroke is increased. It is estimated that about three women per 1000 will have a stroke due to tamoxifen. However, tamoxifen protects against heart disease. So, about three women per 1,000 will not get a heart attack who otherwise would have, making the net effect of combined stroke and heart disease almost none. However, women at high risk for blood clots should probably not take tamoxifen.

The risk of endometria­l cancer in post-menopausal women after five years of tamoxifen is approximat­ely three women per 1,000, whereas it is less than 1 woman per 1,000 for premenopau­sal women treated with tamoxifen.

The risks of tamoxifen are real but small, and so you must weigh them against the benefits. I don’t have enough informatio­n to estimate your risk of a recurrence of breast cancer, but your oncologist does. As an example, a low-risk woman with small stage 1 cancer might have a risk of recurrence of 10%. Tamoxifen would be expected to reduce that by 30% to 40%, meaning an absolute risk reduction of 3% to 4%. For most women, the benefit in breast cancer recurrence is greater than the combined risk of stroke, blood clot, endometria­l cancer and serious liver disease. Most women are on tamoxifen for five years, though some highrisk women will benefit from 10 years — but not indefinite­ly.

Your oncologist should give you more-personaliz­ed risk and benefit estimates than I can give, in order to give you the best informatio­n to make your choice.

DEAR DR. ROACH >> Can I take testostero­ne replacemen­t if I have benign prostatic hypertroph­y?

— P.T.

DEAR P.T. >> Because prostate tissue can grow with testostero­ne treatment, it’s a reasonable question. But, in a large study comparing men who were on testostero­ne treatment versus an inactive placebo, there wasn’t any difference in the symptoms of an enlarged prostate (among the most common symptoms are a slow urinary stream and increased urinary frequency). That’s probably because the testostero­ne replacemen­t just gets men back to normal levels of testostero­ne, not to excessivel­y high levels.

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