Letrozole is approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of local or metastatic breast cancer that is hormone receptor positive or has an unknown receptor status in postmenopausal women.[8]
Comparison with tamoxifen
Tamoxifen is also used to treat hormonally-responsive breast cancer, but it does so by interfering with the estrogen receptor. However, letrozole is effective only in post-menopausal women, in whom estrogen is produced predominantly in peripheral tissues (i.e. in adipose tissue, like that of the breast) and a number of sites in the brain.[9] In pre-menopausal women, the main source of estrogen is from the ovaries not the peripheral tissues, and letrozole is ineffective.
In the BIG 1–98 Study, of post-menopausal women with hormonally-responsive breast cancer, letrozole reduced the recurrence of cancer, but did not change survival rate, compared to tamoxifen.[10][11]
Letrozole has been used for ovulation induction by fertility doctors since 2001, because it has fewer side-effects than clomiphene (Clomid) and less chance of multiple gestation.[citation needed] A study of 150 babies following treatment with either letrozole alone or letrozole and gonadotropins presented at the American Society of Reproductive Medicine 2005 Conference found no difference in overall abnormalities but did find a significantly higher rate of locomotor and cardiac abnormalities among the group having taken letrozole compared to natural conception.[12] A larger, follow-up study with 911 babies compared those born following treatment with letrozole to those born following treatment with clomiphene.[13] That study also found no significant difference in the rate of overall abnormalities, but found that congenital cardiac anomalies was significantly higher in the clomiphene group compared to the letrozole group. Despite this, India banned the usage of letrozole in 2011, citing potential risks to infants.[14] In 2012, an Indian parliamentary committee said that the drug controller office colluded with letrozole's makers to approve the drug for infertility in India and also stated that letrozole's use for infertility was illegal worldwide;[15] however, such off-label uses are legal in many countries such as the US and UK.[16][17]
Medical Abortion
Tests have shown that the efficacy of first-trimester medical abortions (using misoprostol) can be improved by including letrozole in the drug regimen.[18][19][20]
Generally, side effects include signs and symptoms of hypoestrogenism. There is concern that long term use may lead to osteoporosis,[8] which is why in certain patient populations such as post-menopausal women or osteoporotics, bisphosphonates may also be prescribed.[citation needed]
Interactions
Letrozole inhibits the liver enzyme CYP2A6, and to a lesser extent CYP2C19, in vitro, but no relevant interactions with drugs like cimetidine and warfarin have been observed.[22]
The antiestrogen action of letrozole has been shown to be useful in pretreatment for termination of pregnancy, in combination with misoprostol. It can be used in place of mifepristone, which is expensive and unavailable in many countries.[23]
Some studies have shown that letrozole can be used to promote spermatogenesis in male patients with nonobstructive azoospermia.[26]
Letrozole has also been shown to delay the fusing of the growth plates in mice.[27] When used in combination with growth hormone, letrozole has been shown effective in one adolescent boy with a short stature.[28]
Endometrial stromal sarcomas are hormonally sensitive tumors as it is represented that letrozole reduces serum estrogen levels. Letrozole is well-tolerated and is a good option for long-term management of this disease.[30] Also in a study on Uterine myoma the volume was successfully reduced by use of an aromatase inhibitor. Rapid onset of action and avoidance of initial gonadotropin flare with an aromatase inhibitor.[29]
Letrozole has been documented to be safe and effective for improving height and pubertal outcomes in children living with constitutional delay in growth and puberty, and is better than testosterone with regard to improvement in testicular volume and delaying bone-age progression. This was documented in a meta-analysis published by Dutta et al. which analyzed data from 7 different randomized controlled trials.[31]
^World Health Organization (2023). The selection and use of essential medicines 2023: web annex A: World Health Organization model list of essential medicines: 23rd list (2023). Geneva: World Health Organization. hdl:10665/371090. WHO/MHP/HPS/EML/2023.02.
^ abDrugs.com: Monograph for letrozole. It is also used for ovarian cancer patients after they have completed chemotherapy.
^Zhuo Y, Cainuo S, Chen Y, Sun B. The efficacy of letrozole supplementation for medical abortion: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2021 May;34(9):1501-1507. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2019.1638899. Epub 2019 Jul 29. PMID 31257957.
^Yeung TW, Lee VC, Ng EH, Ho PC (December 2012). "A pilot study on the use of a 7-day course of letrozole followed by misoprostol for the termination of early pregnancy up to 63 days". Contraception. 86 (6): 763–769. doi:10.1016/j.contraception.2012.05.009. PMID22717187.
^Lee VC, Ng EH, Yeung WS, Ho PC (February 2011). "Misoprostol with or without letrozole pretreatment for termination of pregnancy: a randomized controlled trial". Obstetrics and Gynecology. 117 (2 Pt 1): 317–23. doi:10.1097/AOG.0b013e3182073fbf. PMID21252745. S2CID25581158.