STAR
Introduction
STAR
Background
STAR-At-A
Glance
STAR
Enrollment Statistics
STAR
Images
STAR
Participant Advisory Board (PAB)
STAR
Publications
STAR Result Images
STAR Q and A |
The
Study of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene, or STAR, is a clinical
trial designed see how the drug raloxifene compares
with the drug tamoxifen in reducing the incidence of
breast cancer in postmenopausal women who are at increased
risk of the disease. (See
a summary of the protocol.) One of the largest breast
cancer prevention studies ever, STAR took place at more
than 500
centers across the United States, Canada, and Puerto
Rico.
Initial results of STAR show that the
drug raloxifene is as effective as tamoxifen in reducing
the breast cancer risk of the women on the trial. In
STAR, both drugs reduced the risk of developing invasive
breast cancer by about 50 percent. In addition, within
the study, women who were assigned to take raloxifene
daily and who were followed for an average of about
four years, had 36 percent fewer uterine cancers and
29 percent fewer blood clots than the women who were
assigned to take tamoxifen. Uterine cancers, especially
endometrial cancers, are a rare but serious side effect
of tamoxifen. Both tamoxifen and raloxifene are known
to increase a woman's risk of blood clots.
Researchers with the National Surgical
Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP), an NCI-funded
Cooperative Group, conducted the trial. STAR was funded
primarily by NCI.
The links on the left of this page will
take you to more detailed information about the trial
and its results so far, including a variety of press
materials (see STAR Background).
Breast cancer is a critical public health
problem: more than 212,000 women will be diagnosed with
breast cancer in the United States this year and more
than 30,000 will die of the disease.
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