Yet another study showed that more than a third of women taking a certain class of breast cancer drugs are so bothered by side effects that they stop taking the pills before their treatment is complete
Doctors typically prescribe a five-year course of the drugs, called aromatase inhibitors, for post-menopausal women after breast cancer surgery, chemotherapy or radiation treatment. The drugs are widely perceived as powerful tools to prevent breast cancer from returning.
The study of nearly 700 women on the drugs revealed that 36 percent of them stopped taking the pills after four years, citing a number of intolerable side effects; 10 percent quit after just two years on the drugs.
Patients reported that a number of intolerable side effects - severe joint pain, hot flashes, decreased libido, weight gain - made them stop taking the drug before their treatments were complete. The patients who were most likely to stop taking their pills were women who had previously undergone chemotherapy or radiation treatments, toxic therapies that cause an array of unpleasant side effects.
“If they had a rough time with chemo, if they're feeling beaten up by treatment and medications, or if they're the type of person who has difficulty tolerating side effects, then they're much more likely to quit the drugs early,” said study author Lynne Wagner, an associate professor of medical social sciences at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.
In a previous study, physicians reported that only 5 percent of patients experienced moderate to severe side effects while taking the drugs. In the current study, the number of women who said the side effects were unbearable was much higher. For instance, nearly 35 percent of women reported severe joint pain. “Now we're appreciating that there's a significant gap between patient-reported symptoms and provider-reported symptoms,” Wagner said. “That gap widens when we're talking about more subjective symptoms, things like pain or fatigue that only a patient can report.”
“I think what this would tell us is, you do need to make time, you do need to tell your patients that it's O.K. to mention these side effects to you, and that they can expect some side effects from these drugs,” said Dr. Jay Brooks, chairman of hematology and oncology for the Ochsner Health System in Baton Rouge, La. “These pills have very profound benefit against breast cancer, but if people don't take the pills, they don't work,” Brooks said. “I can tell you that this study will change my perception to ask questions of patients as we're treating them.”
“Patients often do not volunteer that kind of information. It's up to the doctor or nurse to directly ask them,” said Dr. Harold Burstein, a breast oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. “And it's important to do that because they may be able to take an alternative treatment that doesn't have those side effects.”
The study, presented today at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, is the first to ask women who are actually taking the drugs about how the drugs affect their quality of life.