A national survey of GPs practising in the UK was undertaken in April 2016. Members of a research panel with more than 33 000 members were e-mailed an invitation to take part. Sampling was done by inviting panellists on an unfiltered random basis to avoid over-sampling. GPs practising in Scotland were excluded from these analyses because an agreed care pathway already exists there for the prescription of tamoxifen.9 GPs practising outside of the UK were excluded. The study was prospectively registered (ISRCTN14292000).
How this fits in
The cancer strategy for England recommends that GPs prescribe tamoxifen for breast cancer primary prevention among women at increased risk. The authors demonstrated that GPs are largely unaware of using tamoxifen for primary prevention, and a significant minority may be unwilling to prescribe the drug for eligible patients. These data show that a shared care agreement between primary and secondary care could alleviate a number of concerns, and facilitate appropriate prescribing.