Arimidex
Anastrozole
Generic Name
Anastrozole
Mechanism
- Anastrozole is a potent, selective, non‑steroidal aromatase inhibitor.
- It irreversibly binds the aromatase (CYP19A1) enzyme, preventing the conversion of androgens to estrogen.
- Resulting in a ~95 % reduction in circulating estrogen levels in post‑menopausal women, diminishing growth stimulus for ER‑positive breast cancer cells.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: ~80 % oral bioavailability; peak plasma concentration (Tmax) at 4‑5 h.
- Distribution: highly lipophilic; protein binding ~90 %.
- Metabolism: hepatic oxidation via CYP2C9 and CYP3A4; active metabolites contribute to pharmacologic activity.
- Elimination: ~40 % renal, 60 % fecal.
- Half‑life: ~14‑22 h, supporting once‑daily dosing.
- Drug interactions: minimal clinically relevant interactions; caution with potent CYP2C9 inhibitors or inducers (e.g., fluconazole, rifampin).
Indications
- Adjuvant therapy for estrogen‑receptor (ER) or progesterone‑receptor (PR)‑positive breast cancer in post‑menopausal women.
- Neoadjuvant use for down‑staging locally advanced, ER‑positive tumors (in select settings).
- Maintains endocrine therapy for oligometastatic disease in ER‑positive, aromatase‑sensitive tumors.
Contraindications
- Hypersensitivity to anastrozole or excipients.
- Pregnancy and lactation: contraindicated; avoid use.
- Severe hepatic impairment: caution; monitor function.
- Osteoporosis or significant bone loss risk: consider baseline bone mineral density assessment.
- History of thromboembolic events: use with caution; absolute contraindication in uncontrolled clotting disorders.
Dosing
- Standard dose: 1 mg orally once daily.
- Duration: typically 5 yrs for adjuvant therapy; individualized for metastatic settings.
- Administration tips: take on an empty stomach or with food to enhance absorption; no need to split tablets.
- Compliance monitoring: monthly to quarterly medication refill checks; patient education on the importance of adherence to reduce recurrence risk.
Adverse Effects
| Category | Adverse Effects |
| Common (≥ 10 %) | Hot flashes, arthralgia, fatigue, dizziness, headache, nausea. |
| Less common (1‑10 %) | Breast tenderness, dermatitis, alopecia, constipation. |
| Serious (< 1 %) | Osteoporosis/fragility fractures, myocardial infarction, stroke, severe hyperlipidemia, elevated transaminases. |
• Osteoporotic risk is dose‑time dependent; cumulative estrogen deprivation worsens bone turnover.
• Cardiotoxicity: rare but documented; patients with baseline cardiovascular risk factors should be monitored.
Monitoring
- Baseline:
- Bone mineral density (DXA), serum calcium, phosphate, alkaline phosphatase.
- Liver function tests (ALT/AST, bilirubin).
- Lipid profile.
- Full blood count.
- Ongoing:
- Every 6 months: bone density, liver enzymes, lipid panel.
- Annually: cardiovascular risk assessment (blood pressure, ECG if indicated).
- Adverse effect surveillance: prompt evaluation for new fractures, cardiac symptoms, or significant fatigue.
Clinical Pearls
- Bone health synergy: Pair aromatase inhibitors with bisphosphonates or denosumab in patients ≥5 yrs to counteract estrogen‑deprivation bone loss.
- Switching strategy: If hot flashes or arthralgia are intolerable, switch to a tamoxifen‑based regimen, especially if prior tamoxifen exposure was well tolerated.
- Early monitoring: Obtain baseline bone density within 3 months of initiation; a decline > 5 % predicts fracture risk.
- Lifestyle adjuncts: Encourage calcium (≥ 1000 mg/d) and vitamin D (≥ 800 IU/d) supplementation, weight‑bearing exercise, and smoking cessation to bolster bone integrity.
- Adherence impact: Non‑adherence reduces recurrence‑free survival by ~ 30 %; simple pill‑box reminders can significantly improve compliance among young post‑menopausal patients.