Hormone therapy in breast cancer
For 80% of breast cancers, surgery (lumpectomy or mastectomy) is not enough on its own. Depending on your situation, treatment may combine several approaches: radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapies — and hormone therapy. The latter, a medication taken for 5 to 10 years, significantly reduces the risk of recurrence and mortality. It is not chemotherapy: these are tablets (or monthly injections), taken at home, every day.
So-called hormone-dependent breast cancer is driven by female hormones — estrogens and progesterone. Hormone therapy works by blocking this hormonal stimulation, either at the level of the tumor receptor, or by preventing estrogen production. It is one of the most effective treatments medicine can offer in breast cancer.
The indication is set according to three criteria analyzed on your pathology report: estrogen receptors (ER), progesterone receptors (PR) and — to guide the associated strategy — HER2 status and Ki67. The indication for hormone therapy is not influenced by HER2 status: a HER2+ cancer that is also hormone-dependent will receive hormone therapy.
My role at this stage: to explain why this treatment is being offered to you, to help you understand both the benefits and side effects, and to work closely with the medical oncologist who will oversee prescription and follow-up. Adherence is critical — stopping treatment early significantly reduces its effectiveness.
These recommendations are based on the French INCa 2025 guidelines and the SénoriF 2025-2026 reference, updated based on the TEXT, SOFT, MA17, ATAC, BIG 1-98, ATLAS, aTTom, MonarchE, NATALEE and OlympiA trials.



