Literature DB >> 22015273

The St. Gallen Prize Lecture 2011: evolution of long-term adjuvant anti-hormone therapy: consequences and opportunities.

V Craig Jordan1, Ifeyinwa Obiorah, Ping Fan, Helen R Kim, Eric Ariazi, Heather Cunliffe, Hiltrud Brauch.   

Abstract

The successful translation of the scientific principles of targeting the breast tumour oestrogen receptor (ER) with the nonsteroidal anti-oestrogen tamoxifen and using extended durations (at least 5 years) of adjuvant therapy, dramatically increased patient survivorship and significantly enhanced a drop in national mortality rates from breast cancer. The principles are the same for the validation of aromatase inhibitors to treat post-menopausal patients but tamoxifen remains a cheap, life-saving medicine for the pre-menopausal patient. Results from the Oxford Overview Analysis illustrate the scientific principle of "longer is better" for adjuvant therapy in pre-menopausal patients. One year of adjuvant therapy is ineffective at preventing disease recurrence or reducing mortality, whereas five years of adjuvant tamoxifen reduces recurrence by 50% which is maintained for a further ten years after treatment stops. Mortality is reduced but the magnitude continues to increase to 30% over a 15-year period. With this clinical database, it is now possible to implement simple solutions to enhance survivorship. Compliance with long-term anti-hormone adjuvant therapy is critical. In this regard, the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) to reduce severe menopausal side effects may be inappropriate. It is known that SSRIs block the CYP2D6 enzyme that metabolically activates tamoxifen to its potent anti-oestrogenic metabolite, endoxifen. The selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, venlafaxine, does not block CYP2D6, and may be a better choice. Nevertheless, even with perfect compliance, the relentless drive of the breast cancer cell to acquire resistance to therapy persists. The clinical application of long-term anti-hormonal therapy for the early treatment and prevention of breast cancer, focused laboratory research on the discovery of mechanisms involved in acquired anti-hormone resistance. Decades of laboratory study to reproduce clinical experience described not only the unique mechanism of selective ER modulator (SERM)-stimulated breast cancer growth, but also a new apoptotic biology of oestradiol action in breast cancer, following 5 years of anti-hormonal treatment. Oestradiol-induced apoptotic therapy is currently shown to be successful for the short-term treatment of metastatic ER positive breast cancer following exhaustive treatment with anti-hormones. The "oestrogen purge" concept is now being integrated into trials of long-term adjuvant anti-hormone therapy. The Study of Letrazole Extension (SOLE) trial employs "anti-hormonal drug holidays" so that a woman's own oestrogen may periodically purge and kill the nascent sensitized breast cancer cells that are developing. This is the translation of an idea first proposed at the 1992 St. Gallen Conference. Although tamoxifen is the first successful targeted therapy in cancer, the pioneering medicine is more than that. A study of the pharmacology of tamoxifen opened the door for a pioneering application in cancer chemoprevention and created a new drug group: the SERMs, with group members (raloxifene and lasofoxifene) approved for the treatment and prevention of osteoporosis with a simultaneous reduction of breast cancer risk. Thus, the combined strategies of long-term anti-hormone adjuvant therapy, targeted to the breast tumour ER, coupled with the expanding use of SERMs to prevent osteoporosis and prevent breast cancer as a beneficial side effect, have advanced patient survivorship significantly and promise to reduce breast cancer incidence.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2011        PMID: 22015273      PMCID: PMC3521565          DOI: 10.1016/S0960-9776(11)70287-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breast        ISSN: 0960-9776            Impact factor:   4.380


  87 in total

1.  Effects of anti-estrogens on bone in castrated and intact female rats.

Authors:  V C Jordan; E Phelps; J U Lindgren
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  1987-10       Impact factor: 4.872

2.  Molecular classification of estrogens.

Authors:  V C Jordan; J M Schafer; A S Levenson; H Liu; K M Pease; L A Simons; J W Zapf
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2001-09-15       Impact factor: 12.701

3.  Effects of conjugated equine estrogens on breast cancer and mammography screening in postmenopausal women with hysterectomy.

Authors:  Marcia L Stefanick; Garnet L Anderson; Karen L Margolis; Susan L Hendrix; Rebecca J Rodabough; Electra D Paskett; Dorothy S Lane; F Allan Hubbell; Annlouise R Assaf; Gloria E Sarto; Robert S Schenken; Shagufta Yasmeen; Lawrence Lessin; Rowan T Chlebowski
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2006-04-12       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Twenty-year follow-up of the Royal Marsden randomized, double-blinded tamoxifen breast cancer prevention trial.

Authors:  Trevor J Powles; Sue Ashley; Alwynne Tidy; Ian E Smith; Mitch Dowsett
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2007-02-21       Impact factor: 13.506

Review 5.  Targeting of tamoxifen to enhance antitumour action for the treatment and prevention of breast cancer: the 'personalised' approach?

Authors:  Hiltrud Brauch; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2009-07-09       Impact factor: 9.162

6.  Double-blind, randomized trial comparing the efficacy and tolerability of fulvestrant versus anastrozole in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer progressing on prior endocrine therapy: results of a North American trial.

Authors:  C K Osborne; J Pippen; S E Jones; L M Parker; M Ellis; S Come; S Z Gertler; J T May; G Burton; I Dimery; A Webster; C Morris; R Elledge; A Buzdar
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2002-08-15       Impact factor: 44.544

7.  Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and breast cancer mortality in women receiving tamoxifen: a population based cohort study.

Authors:  Catherine M Kelly; David N Juurlink; Tara Gomes; Minh Duong-Hua; Kathleen I Pritchard; Peter C Austin; Lawrence F Paszat
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2010-02-08

8.  Species-specific pharmacology of antiestrogens: role of metabolism.

Authors:  V C Jordan; S P Robinson
Journal:  Fed Proc       Date:  1987-04

9.  Paradoxical action of fulvestrant in estradiol-induced regression of tamoxifen-stimulated breast cancer.

Authors:  Clodia Osipo; Csaba Gajdos; Hong Liu; Bin Chen; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2003-11-05       Impact factor: 13.506

10.  The genomic complexity of primary human prostate cancer.

Authors:  Michael F Berger; Michael S Lawrence; Francesca Demichelis; Yotam Drier; Kristian Cibulskis; Andrey Y Sivachenko; Andrea Sboner; Raquel Esgueva; Dorothee Pflueger; Carrie Sougnez; Robert Onofrio; Scott L Carter; Kyung Park; Lukas Habegger; Lauren Ambrogio; Timothy Fennell; Melissa Parkin; Gordon Saksena; Douglas Voet; Alex H Ramos; Trevor J Pugh; Jane Wilkinson; Sheila Fisher; Wendy Winckler; Scott Mahan; Kristin Ardlie; Jennifer Baldwin; Jonathan W Simons; Naoki Kitabayashi; Theresa Y MacDonald; Philip W Kantoff; Lynda Chin; Stacey B Gabriel; Mark B Gerstein; Todd R Golub; Matthew Meyerson; Ashutosh Tewari; Eric S Lander; Gad Getz; Mark A Rubin; Levi A Garraway
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-02-10       Impact factor: 49.962

View more
  18 in total

1.  Pharmacological relevance of endoxifen in a laboratory simulation of breast cancer in postmenopausal patients.

Authors:  Philipp Y Maximov; Russell E McDaniel; Daphne J Fernandes; Puspanjali Bhatta; Valeriy R Korostyshevskiy; Ramona F Curpan; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2014-09-24       Impact factor: 13.506

Review 2.  How do I recommend extended adjuvant hormonal therapy?

Authors:  Amitkumar Mehta; John T Carpenter
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2014-03

Review 3.  The optimal duration of adjuvant endocrine therapy for early stage breast cancer--with what drugs and for how long?

Authors:  Stephen R D Johnston; Belinda Yeo
Journal:  Curr Oncol Rep       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 5.075

4.  Differences in the rate of oestrogen-induced apoptosis in breast cancer by oestradiol and the triphenylethylene bisphenol.

Authors:  I E Obiorah; V C Jordan
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 8.739

5.  Acquired resistance to selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) in clinical practice (tamoxifen & raloxifene) by selection pressure in breast cancer cell populations.

Authors:  Ping Fan; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  Steroids       Date:  2014-06-12       Impact factor: 2.668

Review 6.  Minireview: The androgen receptor in breast tissues: growth inhibitor, tumor suppressor, oncogene?

Authors:  T E Hickey; J L L Robinson; J S Carroll; W D Tilley
Journal:  Mol Endocrinol       Date:  2012-06-28

Review 7.  Mitigating the risk of radiation-induced cancers: limitations and paradigms in drug development.

Authors:  Stephen S Yoo; Timothy J Jorgensen; Ann R Kennedy; John D Boice; Alla Shapiro; Tom C-C Hu; Brian R Moyer; Marcy B Grace; Gary J Kelloff; Michael Fenech; Pataje G S Prasanna; C Norman Coleman
Journal:  J Radiol Prot       Date:  2014-04-14       Impact factor: 1.394

8.  Novel selective estrogen mimics for the treatment of tamoxifen-resistant breast cancer.

Authors:  Mary Ellen Molloy; Bethany E Perez White; Teshome Gherezghiher; Bradley T Michalsen; Rui Xiong; Hitisha Patel; Huiping Zhao; Philipp Y Maximov; V Craig Jordan; Gregory R J Thatcher; Debra A Tonetti
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2014-09-09       Impact factor: 6.261

Review 9.  Roles for miRNAs in endocrine resistance in breast cancer.

Authors:  Penn Muluhngwi; Carolyn M Klinge
Journal:  Endocr Relat Cancer       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 5.678

10.  The Wnt signalling pathway is upregulated in an in vitro model of acquired tamoxifen resistant breast cancer.

Authors:  Yan Ni Loh; Ellen L Hedditch; Laura A Baker; Eve Jary; Robyn L Ward; Caroline E Ford
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2013-04-02       Impact factor: 4.430

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.