Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00002644

Tamoxifen for the Prevention of Breast Cancer in High-Risk Women

International Breast Cancer Intervention Study: A Multicentre Trial of Tamoxifen to Prevent Breast Cancer

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
7,154 (actual)
Sponsor
Queen Mary University of London · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
35 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The International Breast Cancer Intervention Study I (IBIS-I) was designed to investigate the use of tamoxifen in preventing breast cancer in women with a higher risk of developing the disease. Recruitment of women to IBIS-I ended in March 2001 and it recruited 7154 women from 36 centres in 9 countries. The results of the study showed that tamoxifen reduced the incidence of breast cancer by one third in these high risk women but with some serious side effects. IBIS-II was designed to continue the work started in IBIS-I by examining the role of anastrozole in the prevention of breast cancer which we hope will reduce breast cancer by even more than tamoxifen with less serious side effects.

Detailed description

Established in 1992, the IBIS-I Study investigated the efficacy of tamoxifen (a hormonal drug used to prevent breast cancer) versus a placebo drug (taken daily for five years) in terms of reduction of breast cancer incidence in pre and postmenopausal women at high risk of developing breast cancer. It was a double-blind, randomised placebo-controlled trial that recruited 7,154 women internationally (of which 4,277 were UK participants), aged 35-70 years. The primary outcome measure was the incidence of breast cancer, including ductal carcinoma in situ (cancer cells in the lining of the breast milk duct) and side effects present in the patients were also investigated. Recruitment to the study completed in 2001 and the intervention (placebo/tamoxifen) ended in 2007. In early 2008 the Research Ethics Committee (REC) approved the conversion of IBIS-I to an epidemiological cohort study. During 2007-2016 participants were followed-up via an annual postal questionnaire. In 2002, initial results found that tamoxifen reduced the risk of invasive breast cancer by 31%. Mortality from non-breast cancer causes was not increased by tamoxifen. However, the analysis concluded that the overall risk/benefit ratio for the use of tamoxifen in prevention remained unclear and that continued follow-up of trial participants was essential. A 2007 analysis on long-term tamoxifen prophylaxis for breast cancer confirmed the preventive effect of tamoxifen in terms of breast cancer incidence and that this was constant for the entire follow-up period. No reduction in size of benefit was observed for up to ten years following participant randomisation. Additionally, tamoxifen-related side effects such as thrombo-embolism were not increased anymore after the 5-year treatment period. These results therefore demonstrate that the benefit-to-risk ratio of tamoxifen improves with increasing duration of follow-up. Thus, how much additional benefit will be seen long-term remains an important question.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTamoxifen Citrate 20Mg TabTamoxifen Citrate 20Mg Tab
OTHERPlaceboPlacebo 20Mg Tab

Timeline

Start date
1994-01-01
Primary completion
2001-01-01
Completion
2011-03-30
First posted
2004-05-11
Last updated
2024-12-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00002644. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.