A nonprofit website dedicated to providing the most reliable and complete information available.
Breastcancer.org
Provides educational materials, events, newsletters, a Young Survivors Network, and a toll-free helpline at 800-753-5222.
Living Beyond Breast Cancer
A comprehensive site that offers a toll-free helpline (1-800-I'M AWARE), educational materials, advocacy, and fundraising events.
Susan G. Komen for the Cure
Many women develop breast tumors that are sensitive to estrogen—a female hormone that feeds a tumor’s growth and development. So for the past 15 years, researchers have experimented with drugs that either lower the production of estrogen in the body or keep a tumor from exploiting it. What hasn’t been clear is which drugs work best, how they should be sequenced, or how long they should be taken.
On Thursday, during the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, researchers presented the latest data from ongoing studies that try to clarify how these drugs should be used. Most of the research compares tamoxifen—one of the oldest and best known breast cancer drugs—to newer drugs called aromatase inhibitors. Whereas tamoxifen blocks estrogen, aromatase inhibitors—known by the brand names Arimidex (anastrozole), Aromasin (exemestane), and Femara (letrozole)—decrease the amount of estrogen in the body.