Description
Anabrez 1mg Tablet (Anastrozole) — Complete Clinical and Patient Information Guide
Product Overview
Anabrez 1mg Tablet (Anastrozole) contains Anastrozole 1mg as its active pharmaceutical ingredient, belonging to the third-generation non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor (AI). It is clinically indicated for post-menopausal hormone receptor-positive (HR+) early and advanced breast cancer — adjuvant therapy, first-line in metastatic HR+ HER2-negative breast cancer. This guide is prepared in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards, drawing on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed pharmacological literature, and established clinical guidelines. Cancer and specialty medications require specialist initiation and monitoring — this information is educational and does not replace professional medical guidance.
Anabrez 1mg provides anastrozole 1mg — a widely prescribed anastrozole formulation for post-menopausal HR+ breast cancer management with ATAC trial-proven superiority over tamoxifen.
Mechanism of Action
Anastrozole is a third-generation non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor that competitively and reversibly inhibits the aromatase enzyme (CYP19A1), suppressing peripheral oestrogen synthesis by >96% in post-menopausal women. By inhibiting aromatase-mediated conversion of androgens to oestrogens in adipose and tumour tissue, anastrozole starves ER+ breast cancers of their oestrogen growth stimulus more effectively than tamoxifen in post-menopausal women — the ATAC trial demonstrated anastrozole superiority over tamoxifen for recurrence risk reduction in post-menopausal ER+ early breast cancer. Unlike steroidal AIs (exemestane), anastrozole is non-steroidal — its binding is competitive and reversible. Anastrozole is also used for ovulation induction in some fertility protocols. Available as 1mg tablets (Femistra, Anaridex, Armotraz, Antreol, Anabrez).
Clinical Indications
Anabrez 1mg Tablet (Anastrozole) is indicated for post-menopausal hormone receptor-positive (HR+) early and advanced breast cancer — adjuvant therapy, first-line in metastatic HR+ HER2-negative breast cancer. Specialist confirmation of diagnosis, eligibility for treatment, and initiation of therapy are mandatory — self-diagnosis and self-treatment of these conditions can be dangerous and may delay or undermine appropriate clinical management.
Dosage and Administration
Anastrozole 1mg once daily. Continue for 5 years adjuvant therapy (or switch from 2–3 years tamoxifen per switching strategy). Anastrozole has no clinically significant food interactions. Bone density monitoring recommended.
Contraindications
Pre-menopausal women (anastrozole is only effective in post-menopausal oestrogen suppression — pre-menopausal use requires concurrent ovarian suppression). Pregnancy (teratogenic). Concurrent tamoxifen or oestrogen-containing therapies (counteract mechanism). Severe hepatic impairment.
Drug Interactions
Tamoxifen: AVOID concurrent use — tamoxifen reduces anastrozole plasma levels AND concurrent AI+SERM provides no additional benefit over either alone. Oestrogen-containing preparations: counteract mechanism. CYP3A4 inducers: may reduce anastrozole levels (minor effect).
Adverse Effects
Musculoskeletal symptoms (arthralgia, joint stiffness — very common, major cause of treatment discontinuation). Hot flushes. Bone loss (osteoporosis) — requires monitoring, supplementation, and bisphosphonate consideration. Vaginal dryness. Headache. Fatigue.
Special Population Considerations
Joint pain (arthralgia) affects 30–50% of patients on aromatase inhibitors — the primary adherence challenge. Management strategies include NSAIDs, exercise, vitamin D optimisation, switch to exemestane (steroidal AI may be better tolerated by some), or temporary treatment break with oncologist guidance. ATAC trial (anastrozole vs tamoxifen): anastrozole significantly reduced contralateral breast cancer, recurrence, and distant metastasis versus tamoxifen in post-menopausal ER+ early breast cancer. Bone protection measures are mandatory.
Storage
Store Anabrez 1mg per manufacturer guidelines. Most oral tablets at room temperature (15–25°C) away from heat, light, and moisture. Injectable medications require refrigeration or specific temperature control — follow pharmacy instructions. Keep out of reach of children and dispose of expired medications through authorised pharmaceutical take-back services.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How should I store this medication?
A: Store at room temperature (15–25°C), away from direct sunlight, heat, and moisture. Keep in original packaging out of reach of children. Injectable oncology medications require specialised storage — follow manufacturer and pharmacy guidance. Do not use beyond the printed expiry date.
Q: What should I do if I miss a dose?
A: For most medications: take as soon as you remember unless it is nearly time for the next dose. Never double-dose. For oncology medications, missed doses should be discussed with your oncologist before taking. Do not stop cancer medications without oncologist guidance.
Q: I’m getting severe joint pain on anastrozole — should I stop?
A: Joint pain (arthralgia) is the most common reason patients stop aromatase inhibitors — affecting up to half of patients. Do NOT stop without discussing with your oncologist first. Management options include: regular gentle exercise (paradoxically helps AI-induced arthralgia); vitamin D optimisation; NSAIDs or paracetamol for acute flares; acupuncture (some evidence); switching to exemestane (steroidal AI, different mechanism, may be better tolerated); or a supervised treatment break. Stopping AI therapy increases breast cancer recurrence risk — explore management strategies before discontinuing.
Evidence Base, Regulatory Status, and Quality Standards
The active ingredient in Anabrez 1mg has been evaluated in clinical trials and regulatory submissions reviewed by competent health authorities. Oncology and specialty medications are subject to stringent regulatory scrutiny given their risk-benefit profiles in serious conditions. Major oncology guidelines from ESMO, ASCO, NCCN, and relevant national bodies inform prescribing decisions. All medications should be obtained through licensed, regulated pharmacies with valid prescriptions from registered specialists to ensure receipt of authentic, quality-assured products. GMP compliance ensures consistent product quality, identity, strength, and purity.
Cancer and Specialty Medicine Clinical Context
Cancer represents the second leading cause of death globally, accounting for approximately 10 million deaths annually. Modern oncology has been transformed by targeted therapy — drugs designed around specific molecular alterations in cancer cells (BCR-ABL in CML, HER2 in breast cancer, EGFR/ALK in NSCLC, VEGFR in solid tumours) achieving outcomes unimaginable with conventional chemotherapy. The era of precision oncology requires molecular profiling of each patient’s tumour before prescribing targeted agents — EGFR testing for erlotinib/gefitinib, HER2 testing for trastuzumab, ALK testing for ceritinib, and BCR-ABL for imatinib.
Conventional chemotherapy agents (paclitaxel, carboplatin, cyclophosphamide, fluorouracil, epirubicin, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, gemcitabine, dacarbazine, cytarabine, etoposide) remain essential backbones of cancer treatment — often combined with targeted agents in multi-drug regimens. Their cytotoxic mechanisms targeting rapidly dividing cells inevitably affect normal bone marrow, GI mucosa, and hair follicles — explaining myelosuppression, mucositis, and alopecia as class-wide adverse effects that require supportive care.
Haematological malignancies — leukaemias, lymphomas, multiple myeloma — represent a distinct oncological domain where molecular-targeted drugs have achieved remarkable results: imatinib transformed CML from a uniformly fatal disease to one with near-normal life expectancy; rituximab dramatically improved lymphoma outcomes; and the IMiD class (thalidomide, lenalidomide, pomalidomide) has progressively extended myeloma survival.
Parasitic Disease and Tropical Medicine Context
Parasitic infections cause enormous global morbidity — lymphatic filariasis affects 120 million people causing disfiguring lymphoedema; onchocerciasis blinds millions in sub-Saharan Africa; intestinal helminths impair growth and cognition in hundreds of millions of children; scabies infects approximately 200 million people globally; and Giardia/Cryptosporidium cause millions of diarrhoeal episodes annually. Ivermectin, albendazole, mebendazole, and DEC are WHO Essential Medicines — available for low cost and capable of eliminating these diseases when deployed through mass drug administration programmes.
Evidence Base and Quality Standards
The active ingredients in this product range have been evaluated in landmark clinical trials forming the evidence base for modern oncology, infectious disease, and specialty medicine: IPASS (gefitinib in EGFR-mutant NSCLC), ALEX (alectinib in ALK+ NSCLC), BOLERO-2 (everolimus+exemestane), ATAC (anastrozole), COU-AA-301/302 (abiraterone), AFFIRM/PREVAIL (enzalutamide), INPULSIS (nintedanib), ASTRAL-1 to 4 (sofosbuvir/velpatasvir), and many others. GMP-compliant manufacturing ensures consistent pharmaceutical quality. Patients must obtain oncology and specialty medications from licensed pharmacies with valid prescriptions from registered specialists.
Patient Safety, Monitoring, and Adherence
Oncology and specialty pharmacotherapy requires active patient engagement for optimal outcomes. Adherence to oral cancer drugs is critical — missed doses of TKIs like imatinib, erlotinib, and enzalutamide directly reduce drug exposure and potentially allow tumour progression or drug resistance development. Studies in CML show that patients with <80% imatinib adherence have significantly worse molecular response rates and higher transformation risk. The same principle applies to endocrine therapy for breast cancer — patients discontinuing anastrozole or tamoxifen early have substantially higher recurrence rates. Adherence support, side effect management, and patient education are as important as drug selection.
Monitoring requirements for specialty medications are stringent and non-negotiable. FBC monitoring during chemotherapy and methotrexate therapy prevents life-threatening myelosuppression complications. LFT monitoring during TKI and anthracycline therapy detects hepatotoxicity before it becomes severe. Cardiac monitoring during trastuzumab and anthracycline therapy prevents irreversible cardiomyopathy. Molecular monitoring (BCR-ABL PCR, HCV RNA, HBV DNA) determines treatment response and guides duration decisions.
All patients on oncology and specialty medications benefit from structured support: specialist oncology nurse coordination, patient support groups, pharmacist medication counselling, and regular specialist review. Complex medication regimens should be clearly written, explained verbally, and reviewed at each clinical encounter to identify any confusion, interactions, or emerging side effects requiring management.
Responsible Use and Safe Disposal
Oncology medications — particularly oral cytotoxic agents (cyclophosphamide, capecitabine, temozolomide, methotrexate) — are hazardous drugs requiring careful handling. Pregnant women and those planning pregnancy should not handle broken or crushed oral cytotoxic tablets. Unused or expired medications must be returned to a licensed pharmacy for safe hazardous pharmaceutical disposal — never disposed of in household waste or toilet.
Multi-Disciplinary Oncology Care
Modern cancer management requires multi-disciplinary team (MDT) decision-making — integrating oncologists, surgeons, radiologists, pathologists, specialist nurses, and pharmacists to develop individualised treatment plans. Pharmacological therapy (chemotherapy, targeted agents, endocrine therapy, immunotherapy) is one component of comprehensive cancer care alongside surgery (with curative intent for localised disease), radiotherapy (definitive, adjuvant, or palliative), and supportive/palliative care. Clinical trials offer access to novel therapies and the opportunity to advance cancer treatment knowledge — eligible patients should be offered trial participation where available.
Oncology pharmacy practice has become a specialised discipline — oncology pharmacists review complex multi-drug regimens for interactions and dosing errors, prepare hazardous IV chemotherapy safely, counsel patients on managing side effects of oral cancer drugs, and monitor for drug-induced toxicities. The safe use of oncology medications depends on this specialised expertise at every step from prescription to administration.
Palliative and supportive care integration is equally important — managing cancer symptoms (pain, nausea, fatigue, dyspnoea) and treatment side effects (chemotherapy-induced nausea, peripheral neuropathy, immunosuppression, mucositis) maintains quality of life throughout the cancer journey. Early palliative care integration (not just end-of-life care) improves patient outcomes and quality of life even in patients receiving active curative therapy.
Drug Supply and Authentic Procurement
For oncology and specialty medicines, procurement from authenticated, licensed sources is critically important. Counterfeit cancer medications are a documented global public health problem — they range from diluted products (containing less active ingredient than labelled, providing inadequate treatment) to products containing no active ingredient, to products with contaminated or substituted ingredients causing direct harm. Always obtain cancer medications from licensed, regulated pharmacies with valid prescriptions. Indian regulatory authority (CDSCO) oversight and manufacturer GMP compliance provide assurance of product quality for domestically produced cancer medicines.
Important Medical Disclaimer
This product information guide is provided for general educational purposes only, prepared in accordance with YMYL (Your Money Your Life) content standards. All information draws on regulatory prescribing information, peer-reviewed pharmacological and oncological literature, and established clinical guidelines. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified oncologist, haematologist, physician, or specialist pharmacist. Cancer drug therapy decisions require individualised assessment by qualified oncology professionals with full knowledge of the patient’s diagnosis, staging, molecular profile, performance status, and concurrent medications. Self-diagnosis and self-treatment of cancer and serious medical conditions can be life-threatening. Always consult a qualified specialist before starting, changing, or stopping any cancer or specialty medication.

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