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Abstract
Background. Whereas the
frequency of alopecia to cytotoxic chemotherapies has been well
described, the incidence of alopecia during endocrine
therapies (i.e., anti-estrogens, aromatase
inhibitors) has not been investigated. Endocrine agents are widely used
in the
treatment and prevention of many solid tumors,
principally those of the breast and prostate. Adherence to these
therapies
is suboptimal, in part because of toxicities. We
performed a systematic analysis of the literature to ascertain the
incidence
and risk for alopecia in patients receiving
endocrine therapies.
Methods. An independent
search of citations was conducted using the PubMed database for all
literature as of February 2013. Phase
II–III studies using the terms “tamoxifen,”
“toremifene,” “raloxifene,” “anastrozole,” “letrozole,” “exemestane,”
“fulvestrant,”
“leuprolide,” “flutamide,” “bicalutamide,”
“nilutamide,” “fluoxymesterone,” “estradiol,” “octreotide,” “megestrol,”
“medroxyprogesterone
acetate,” “enzalutamide,” and “abiraterone” were
searched.
Results. Data from 19,430
patients in 35 clinical trials were available for analysis. Of these,
13,415 patients had received endocrine
treatments and 6,015 patients served as controls.
The incidence of all-grade alopecia ranged from 0% to 25%, with an
overall
incidence of 4.4% (95% confidence interval:
3.3%–5.9%). The highest incidence of all-grade alopecia was observed in
patients
treated with tamoxifen in a phase II trial (25.4%);
similarly, the overall incidence of grade 2 alopecia by meta-analysis
was highest with tamoxifen (6.4%). The overall
relative risk of alopecia in comparison with placebo was 12.88 (p < .001), with selective estrogen receptor modulators having the highest risk.
Conclusion. Alopecia is a
common yet underreported adverse event of endocrine-based cancer
therapies. Their long-term use heightens the
importance of this condition on patients’ quality
of life. These findings are critical for pretherapy counseling, the
identification
of risk factors, and the development of
interventions that could enhance adherence and mitigate this
psychosocially difficult
event.
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