Concerned about the side effects of anastrozole

Posted by tinalove @tinalove, Jan 31, 2016

I completed all treatments for breast cancer but now I am supposed to take hormone blocker, named anastrozole. im concerned about the side effects. Has anyone here taken it and did anyone have hair loss?

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@elsie37

This study, just presented at the San Antonia Breast Cancer Symposium, Dec of 2019 might be of interest.

MY SUMMARY AND TEXT FROM THE STUDY

Anastrozole significantly reduced breast cancer after even 10.9 years after stopping the drug--a 50% reduction vs a placebo. Now on to deaths from breast cancer. At the time of analysis, 129 deaths had been reported, with no significant difference in all-cause mortality between the anastrozole and placebo groups. There had been only five deaths from breast cancer, two among those assigned anastrozole and three among those assigned placebo. “This is too few breast cancer deaths to determine if anastrozole reduces breast cancer mortality, so we are planning to follow the IBIS-II Prevention participants for longer to investigate this,” Cuzick concluded.

THE WHOLE STUDY

SABCS 2019: Breast cancer preventive effects of anastrozole persist long after stopping treatment
12 Dec 2019

Breast cancer incidence among post menopausal women at high risk for developing the disease continued to be significantly reduced 5.9 years after stopping five years of the aromatase inhibitor anastrozole, according to data from the International Breast Cancer Intervention Study II (IBIS-II) Prevention trial presented at the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, held Dec.10–14.

The study is being simultaneously published in the The Lancet.

“IBIS-II Prevention was designed to investigate whether fiveyears of anastrozole can safely and effectively prevent breast cancer in postmenopausal women who are at high risk for the disease,” said Jack Cuzick, PhD, cochairman of the International Breast Cancer Intervention Studies. “In 2013, we reported that in the first seven years of follow-up, anastrozole significantly reduced breast cancer incidence compared with placebo and that it did so with very few side effects."

“Our new data show that after a median of 10.9 years of follow-up there continues to be a significant reduction in breast cancer incidence,” continued Cuzick, who is also director of the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, head of the Centre for Cancer Prevention, and the John Snow Professor of Epidemiology at Queen Mary University of London.

“It is exciting to see that anastrozole has a continued impact on breast cancer incidence even after stopping treatment, as this strengthens the case for its use as a breast cancer prevention therapy.”

Cuzick and colleagues enrolled 3,864 postmenopausal women at increased risk for developing breast cancer in the IBIS-II Prevention study from 2003 to 2012.

Women were considered to be at high risk for breast cancer if they fulfilled any one of a number of criteria, including having two or more blood relatives with breast cancer, having a mother or sister who developed breast cancer before the age of 50, and having a mother or sister who had breast cancer in both breasts.

Among the participants, 1,920 were randomly assigned to anastrozole for five years and 1,944 to placebo.

Five-year adherence to treatment was 74.6 percent for anastrozole and 77.0 percent for placebo, which is not significantly different.

After a median follow-up of 10.9 years, the researchers found that women assigned to anastrozole were 50 percent less likely to have developed breast cancer compared with women assigned to the placebo.

Cuzick explained that there were no new adverse side effects to add to those reported in 2013, which were mostly small increases in muscle aches and pains, and hot flashes.

“No excess of fractures or other serious side effects were seen with anastrozole,” he said.“The 50 percent reduction in likelihood of breast cancer incidence after 10.9 years of follow-up is slightly less than the 53 percent reduction we reported after the first seven years of follow-up, but it is still a significant effect and larger than that seen for tamoxifen,” said Cuzick.

“Another way to consider the data is that it translates into an estimated 29 women needing to be treated with anastrozole for five years to prevent one breast cancer during treatment and in the next five years.

“This is far fewer women than the estimated 49 women that need to be treated with tamoxifen for five years to prevent one breast cancer in the same time period,”added Cuzick.

“Therefore, our new results strongly suggest that anastrozole should be the preferred therapy for breast cancer prevention in postmenopausal women at increased risk for the disease, with tamoxifen used for women who experience severe side effects from anastrozole.”

Cuzick cautioned that the preventive benefits of anastrozole are seen for oestrogen receptor–positive breast cancer and for ductal carcinoma in situ but not for pestrogen receptor–negative breast cancer.

This is to be expected, he says, because anastrozole targets the oestrogen pathway.

At the time of analysis, 129 deaths had been reported, with no significant difference in all-cause mortality between the anastrozole and placebo groups.

There had been only five deaths from breast cancer, two among those assigned anastrozole and three among those assigned placebo.

“This is too few breast cancer deaths to determine if anastrozole reduces breast cancer mortality, so we are planning to follow the IBIS-II Prevention participants for longer to investigate this,” Cuzick concluded.

The link:
https://ecancer.org/en/news/17064-sabcs-2019-breast-cancer-preventive-effects-of-anastrozole-persist-long-after-stopping-treatment

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@elsie37
Great excerpt (and news)! As a triple-positive bc patient, I always wonder if such news applies to me, however... and such trials/studies rarely get into the subtype differences. (Triple positives often are resistant to chemo and AI benefits, for example, and yet we end up taking both!).

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Hello, I am wondering if anyone on anastrozole developed new side effects after several months on it? I have been on it about 7 months. Developed stiff hands and joints pretty quickly, that didn’t go away. I also had some back and side aches early on but it quit after a month or so. But now I have been getting headaches for the last 3 days. Is it common for side effects to shift over time with this drug?

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@feistylf

Hello, I am wondering if anyone on anastrozole developed new side effects after several months on it? I have been on it about 7 months. Developed stiff hands and joints pretty quickly, that didn’t go away. I also had some back and side aches early on but it quit after a month or so. But now I have been getting headaches for the last 3 days. Is it common for side effects to shift over time with this drug?

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@feistylf, Anastozole was the first AI my doctor prescribed after my cancer surgery. I stayed on it for a year and a half, and experienced all of the side effects you've mentioned here except headaches. Finally, I couldn't tolerate it anymore and tried Exemestane. I also had side effects from that drug. Finally my doctor prescribed Tamoxifen and I've been taking that for quite a long time with very few side effects at all. I hope you find some relief soon. I would definitely recommend a conference with your Oncologist.

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I am 75 yrs old and have been taking Anastrozole for 2 years and 2 months. I had back pain during the first year but it comes and goes and mostly now it is gone. I also developed trigger finger on both hands, the middle finger. It has improved and also comes and goes . I have not had headaches. I keep active biking and/or walking. I exercise at least an hour a day and usually more. The best thing to reduce side effects is to walk every day. I suggest you discuss your side effects with your oncologist. It is possible to have physical Issues that are not related to Anastrozole. A three day headache should be checked.

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@feistylf

Hello, I am wondering if anyone on anastrozole developed new side effects after several months on it? I have been on it about 7 months. Developed stiff hands and joints pretty quickly, that didn’t go away. I also had some back and side aches early on but it quit after a month or so. But now I have been getting headaches for the last 3 days. Is it common for side effects to shift over time with this drug?

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@feistylf
Yes, my side effects changed from time to time, for what that's worth. After about two years, I stopped noticing them or perhaps some just went away. The only one which annoys me is the trigger thumb. I'll get a shot in my thumb for it, but it returns after several months.

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@feistylf

Hello, I am wondering if anyone on anastrozole developed new side effects after several months on it? I have been on it about 7 months. Developed stiff hands and joints pretty quickly, that didn’t go away. I also had some back and side aches early on but it quit after a month or so. But now I have been getting headaches for the last 3 days. Is it common for side effects to shift over time with this drug?

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On anastrozole one of the strange side effects was my toes and shoulders were achy - but after about 6 months that side effect went away. The pain in my hands only got worse - so after 12 months I switched to Exemestane. My hand pain is either 0 or 1 now, where before it was about a 7 for 24/7. Still suffering insomnia and hot flashes - those never go away. Closing in on 2 years now. I hope to go the full 5 years.

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Thank you everyone for your replies, your feedback is very helpful. I was able to email my doc and he also feels the headaches are unrelated to the anastrozole as they came on so suddenly. He said It could be due to viral illness or other issues and if doesn’t resolve on its own they can do additional testing. I have my 3 month appt in a few weeks so hopefully I can hold out until then. Today no headache, so fingers crossed. I want to try to stay on anastrozole if I can, but I did write down the other meds you mentioned to discuss with my doc to see if those could be better. And I do need to exercise more and maybe add yoga. I feel more sluggish than I did when I was on the chemo :-/

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@kathyomaha55

On anastrozole one of the strange side effects was my toes and shoulders were achy - but after about 6 months that side effect went away. The pain in my hands only got worse - so after 12 months I switched to Exemestane. My hand pain is either 0 or 1 now, where before it was about a 7 for 24/7. Still suffering insomnia and hot flashes - those never go away. Closing in on 2 years now. I hope to go the full 5 years.

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Thanks for sharing your experience. It’s good to know there is another choice of medication if the side effects get worse. I have heard, and I am hoping, that when I finish the medication the side effects will stop as well. I am 1 1/2 years in.

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To everyone - I was on anastrazole - horrible side effects immediately so I had to stop. Took letrozole and after two weeks could not handle it. Started eximestrane two weeks ago and so far so good. Only side effect is a bit of constipation. Good luck!

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@kathyomaha55

On anastrozole one of the strange side effects was my toes and shoulders were achy - but after about 6 months that side effect went away. The pain in my hands only got worse - so after 12 months I switched to Exemestane. My hand pain is either 0 or 1 now, where before it was about a 7 for 24/7. Still suffering insomnia and hot flashes - those never go away. Closing in on 2 years now. I hope to go the full 5 years.

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For insomnia I got a vape pen from local marijuana dispensary with a little oil product and have two or three tokes when I climb into bed. It’s a miracle! Ask for the kind that helps you sleep. It’s legal in Michigan.

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