Tamoxifen is a carcinogen??!

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I am so confused with the fad of using tamoxifen as it is a carinogen ??! Why would we fight cancer with cancer . Does anyone know of herbal supplements to take to lower estrogen or should I just remove my overies???

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  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited January 2018

    The use of tamoxifen very slightly (1%-barely statistically significant) increases your chance of developing uterine cancer because the effect on your estrogen metabolism can cause in your uterine lining and cause it to become thickened/proliferative. Not because it is a "carcinogen."

  • buttonsmachine
    buttonsmachine Member Posts: 930
    edited January 2018

    Tamoxifen can cause cancer, although the chances of that happening are quite low. For many women, the likelihood of their breast cancer coming back without tamoxifen is far greater than the likelihood of developing a new primary cancer due to tamoxifen.

    For me it was a no-brainer: 30% recurrence risk of breast cancer without tamoxifen, or a less than 1% chance of uterine cancer on tamoxifen. Also, many women who remove their ovaries still need to be on hormone meds to block the effects of estrogen in the body. Your brain makes estrogen too.

    As for fighting cancer with cancer, yes, it's not ideal, but it's the best we have right now. Maybe one day there will be a better cure. It all depends of your individual statistics whether or not tamoxifen is worth it. I can understand your misgivings - before cancer I was always a natural sort of person, and I didn't even like taking ibuprofen, but here I am. Best wishes to you in your decision.

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited January 2018

    If you're that worried, don't take it. For me, the massive amount of cancer prevention is well worth the miniscule amount of risk.

  • Paco
    Paco Member Posts: 208
    edited January 2018

    Fair question, Briannadawn.

    I do wonder why DCIS is treated with surgery, radiation and Tamoxifen in the same way that higher stage cancers are. It does seem like overkill...? My breast surgeon recommended this course of action during my first consult with her. I'm going to reserve any decisions until I have all the information back from the pathology report and have an appointment with the MO to see what she says is my own personal risk. For what it's worth, I'm 48 and plan on hanging around at least another 30 years so that will always be in my decision making.

  • Paco
    Paco Member Posts: 208
    edited January 2018

    Fair question, Briannadawn. Tamoxifen seems like it has a lot of unpleasant side effects to many (but not all) women.Β 

    I also wonder about the prevalence of its use in treatment. For example, why is noninvasive DCIS is treated with surgery, radiation and Tamoxifen in the same way that higher stage cancers are? It sure seems like overkill...? My breast surgeon recommended this course of action during my first consult with her. I'm going to reserve any decisions until I have all the information back from the pathology report and have an appointment with the MO to see what she says is my own personal risk. For what it's worth, I'm 48 and plan on hanging around at least another 30 years so that will always be in my decision making.

  • Michelle_in_cornland
    Michelle_in_cornland Member Posts: 1,689
    edited January 2018

    DCIS can progress and develop into a worse prognosis, which, of course, we would not want to happen.

  • Briannadawn
    Briannadawn Member Posts: 7
    edited January 2018

    but is it only preventing it until you stop the medication? Then what happens when your are off of tamoxifen? I wish i knew why my body wasn’t working properly :(

  • KBeee
    KBeee Member Posts: 5,109
    edited January 2018

    Tamoxifen continues to lower your risk years after you stop taking it.

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited January 2018

    Briannadawn:

    You stated elsewhere that you were initially diagnosed with hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, Clinical "stage 3" ("7cm breast cancer"). However, you also noted that surgery and SNB revealed more extensive disease, so further breast and lymph node surgery were recommended. You haven't given any more information about your final Pathologic stage, based on the combined results of all surgeries. If you're not sure about it, then be sure to obtain complete copies of the pathology reports from all biopsies and surgeries (and related ER, PR and HER2 testing) for your review and records, and ask your team to provide your Pathologic stage for your understanding.

    Without information about your final Pathologic stage, there is some risk that members here may give you incorrect information about the potential benefits of Tamoxifen from trials that don't apply to your situation.

    You need expert medical advice from your Medical Oncologist that is based on the results of clinical trials in patients with your final pathologic stage of breast cancer, and on what those trials have demonstrated about the ability of five or ten years of Tamoxifen therapy to reduce the risk of local recurrence, the risk of new disease (in the same or contralateral breast), the risk of distant (metastatic) recurrence, and/or death, and whether (in the applicable clinical trials), the benefit(s) persist after treatment stops and how much.

    In general, the benefits of Tamoxifen are proportional to recurrence risks and risk of death, such that those at greater risk potentially reap larger benefit. Therefore, to make an informed decision about endocrine therapy (e.g., Tamoxifen) requires a case-specific risk/benefit analysis based on information from a Medical Oncologist familiar with your case and risk profile.

    If you have not received (a) estimates of your various risks (e.g., death; distant recurrence; local recurrence) after all other treatments; (b) the potential "absolute benefit" of Tamoxifen in reducing these risks in your particular case; (c) information about the risk of severe adverse effects (in light of your personal medical and family history); and (d) how the benefit of (b) compares with the risk of (c), then please ask your Medical Oncologist to provide this information and explain it to you. It is a good idea to take notes and ask your oncologist to check that your notes are accurate.

    I suspect that in your case, numerically, the potential benefits of Tamoxifen substantially outweigh the potential risks, but please seek case-specific advice from your doctor.

    By the way, to suggest that the use of Tamoxifen to treat invasive breast cancer is a "fad" is misleading and inaccurate. Tamoxifen has been in clinical use for treating invasive breast cancer for decades. In the appropriate case, it is recommended under clinical consensus guidelines from ASCO, NCCN, ESMO, Canadian authorities, etcetera, based on a substantial amount of clinical trial data, including randomized, prospective, placebo-controlled trials with long-term follow-up.

    BarredOwl

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited January 2018

    People with invasive breast cancer are at risk of distant (metastatic) recurrence and mortality from their current invasive breast cancer diagnosis (the size of these risks depends on details of diagnosis), and reducing these particular risks is typically the primary purpose of endocrine therapy (e.g., Tamoxifen, an aromatase inhibitor) when recommended in such patients. (They can also reap benefits in loco-regional control.)

    In contrast, the primary purpose of endocrine therapy (e.g., Tamoxifen, an aromatase inhibitor) in those with pure DCIS (non-invasive, Stage 0) disease is to reduce the risks of same in-breast local recurrence or new disease, and secondarily, the risk of new disease in the contralateral breast. In general, although the incidence of severe adverse effects of Tamoxifen (i.e., certain uterine malignancies, stroke and pulmonary embolism) is very low, given the distinctly different nature of the risks driving treatment recommendations for DCIS, those risks tend to weigh heavier against the potential benefit.

    The situation of a person with some type of Stage III invasive breast cancer (which carries significant risks of distant recurrence and breast cancer mortality) is quite different from that of a person with pure DCIS (Stage 0, a "non-invasive" condition). The main commonality is the need for a personalized risk/benefit analysis.

    BarredOwl

  • Briannadawn
    Briannadawn Member Posts: 7
    edited January 2018

    That’s is my final pathology test? Guess I’m the only one who believes the Big Pharma is evil and was hoping to find some light on this website. Ah well! I’ll keep doing my holistic ways. God bless everyone and thanks for your i

  • BarredOwl
    BarredOwl Member Posts: 2,433
    edited January 2018

    Brianna:

    If you had the additional recommended lymph node surgery and mastectomy after you were told "Stage 3", there would be another pathology report from that additional surgery.

    "Stage 3" could include any one of three different stages with differing prognoses and treatment recommendations:

    Stage IIIA, Stage IIIB or Stage IIIC.

    Supplements are extensively discussed in the Alternative Forum and Complementary Forum. If you want to learn about supplements, feel free to visit those Forums.

    You posted here in a Conventional thread and you asked questions about oophorectomy and Tamoxifen. Naturally, people answered those questions.

    If a person with "Stage 3" breast cancer says they are "confused" about Tamoxifen use in light of certain relatively rare severe adverse side effects, people are going to explain how the benefits of treatment are weighed against the risks of treatment.

    If a person later asks whether there is any benefit after Tamoxifen treatment stops, people may comment on that. (By the way, I only know that "trailing benefit" has been seen for "early stage breast cancer." However, "Stage 3" includes several different stages, some of which are not "early breast cancer" and I know nothing about them.)

    If person asks about removing their ovaries, people will comment on that. Of course, bilateral oophorectomy is not without risks of its own (it is not risk-free). Please discuss it with your team.

    As noted by others above, bilateral oophorectomy does not obviate the need for endocrine therapy when indicated under clinical guidelines. If a person has a bilateral oophorectomy, they are considered "post-menopausal." If a person with some type of Stage 3 breast cancer receives a bilateral oophorectomy, a Medical Oncologist would likely still recommend an Aromatase Inhibitor (or Tamoxifen), because clinically significant amounts of estrogen are still produced by tissues other than the ovary in post-menopausal women. That said, AI's have a very different side effect profile from Tamoxifen, and so some prefer an AI to Tamoxifen because of that.

    For completeness only, I note that instead of bilateral oophorectomy plus endocrine therapy, appropriate patients may choose the option of an ovarian suppression drug plus Tamoxifen or an AI. Some try this approach before transitioning to permanent oophorectomy plus Tamoxifen or an AI.

    Again, information about supplements used by members here can be found in other Forums, although to my layperson's knowledge, unlike Tamoxifen and AI's, supplements are not supported by clinical evidence of therapeutic efficacy in terms of statistically significant improvements in distant disease-free survival and in overall survival from trials in patients with hormone receptor-positive invasive breast cancer.

    BarredOwl

  • Falconer
    Falconer Member Posts: 1,192
    edited January 2018
    BarredOwl,
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  • Beesie
    Beesie Member Posts: 12,240
    edited January 2018

    Breathing is a carcinogen.

    By opening our mouths and taking in air, we also take in whatever particles are in the air, and inevitably, some of those particles are cancer-causing.

    So we can choose not to breathe. The problem however is that the risk of death from not breathing is much higher and more certain, and much more imminent, than the risk that some of those carcinogens that we've inhaled might actually one day turn into cancer, and that this cancer might become deadly.

    Briannadawn, if your diagnosis is what's been discussed here, a very large tumor with extensive nodal involvement, my example, while silly, isn't that far off from the reality of your situation, with regard to your risk from your current disease vs. the potential long-term risk from conventional treatments such as chemo and Tamoxifen

    Never mind Big Pharma, Cancer is Evil. However bad you think Big Pharma is, compared to Cancer, it's a bunny rabbit.

  • gb2115
    gb2115 Member Posts: 1,894
    edited January 2018

    Not to beat a dead horse here, but yeah tamoxifen is not a fad. I have been personally affected by stage 4 spread in a family member who had been off endocrine therapy for 9 years (after being on it as prescribed). Cells were dormant until they decided not to be. Same type of cancer as mine. It's like looking in a mirror. I'm thankful everyday when I take my tamoxifen because there's a good chance it will prevent that from happening to me, at least for the 10 years I will be on it. I hope when my tamoxifen time is up there will be something new I can take to further prevent it from coming back.

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