| Literature DB >> 35159024 |
Saikat Mitra1, Mashia Subha Lami1, Avoy Ghosh1, Rajib Das1, Trina Ekawati Tallei2,3, Fahadul Islam4, Kuldeep Dhama5, M Yasmin Begum6, Afaf Aldahish7, Kumarappan Chidambaram7, Talha Bin Emran8.
Abstract
In recent years, hormone therapy has been shown to be a remarkable treatment option for cancer. Hormone treatment for gynecological cancers involves the use of medications that reduce the level of hormones or inhibit their biological activity, thereby stopping or slowing cancer growth. Hormone treatment works by preventing hormones from causing cancer cells to multiply. Aromatase inhibitors, anti-estrogens, progestin, estrogen receptor (ER) antagonists, GnRH agonists, and progestogen are effectively used as therapeutics for vulvar cancer, cervical cancer, vaginal cancer, uterine cancer, and ovarian cancer. Hormone replacement therapy has a high success rate. In particular, progestogen and estrogen replacement are associated with a decreased incidence of gynecological cancers in women infected with human papillomavirus (HPV). The activation of estrogen via the transcriptional functionality of ERα may either be promoted or decreased by gene products of HPV. Hormonal treatment is frequently administered to patients with hormone-sensitive recurring or metastatic gynecologic malignancies, although response rates and therapeutic outcomes are inconsistent. Therefore, this review outlines the use of hormonal therapy for gynecological cancers and identifies the current knowledge gaps.Entities:
Keywords: GnRH agonist; anti-estrogen; aromatase inhibitors; gynecological cancers; hormonal therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35159024 PMCID: PMC8833573 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Pathogenesis of gynecological cancers. Ovarian: Borderline tumors can form from the ovarian surface epithelium and can develop into low grade serous, endometrioid, clear cell, and mucinous carcinoma by mutation and alteration of certain genes, e.g., KRAS, BRAF, NRAS, HER2, CTNNB1, BRAF, ERBB2, ARID1A, PIK3CA, PTEN, HER2, etc. High-grade serous carcinoma is developed from normal fallopian tube epithelium by the mutation of TP53, CDK12, BRCA1 and 2. Uterine: Uterine cancer result from TP53, HER2, PI3K, FBXW7, KRAS, PTEN, MLHI, MSH6, Beta- catenin mutation, and CTNNBI alteration. Vulvar: (uVIN: E6 degrades the tumor suppressor p53; E7 inactivates the tumor suppressor RB and releases E2F resulting in hyperproliferation.) (dVIN: Chronic dermatoses, especially Lichen sclerosus and Lichen planus, can progress to dVIN and SCC), (VIN, vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia). Vaginal: TP53 gene alteration and HPV 16 and 18, etc., are the importance carcinogenic factors for both HPV-dependent or -independent vaginal cancer. Cervical: Production of E7 and E6, infection with HPV, CIN progression cause differentiation in squamous cervical cells and cause invasive adenocarcinoma.
Figure 2Hormonal therapies to counter gynecological cancer progression.
Experimental and clinical studies of hormonal therapy to treat cervical cancer.
| Name of Hormone | Formulation Name and Dose | Observation Time | Study Model | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ER antagonist | 0.15 mL Faslodex and 1.5 mg of raloxifene | Faslodex twice a week for a month and raloxifene for a month, 5 days a week | K14E7 and K14E6 transgenic mice | Raloxifene, ER antagonist and selective ER modulator, efficiently clears cancer and its precursor lesions in both the cervix and the vagina | [ |
| Non-steroid synthetic estrogen with synthetic progestagen | Dienestrol—1 tablet (5 mg) and | 5 years | 120 patients after surgery and/or radiotherapy | Only 20% and 32% incidence of cancer recurrences and survival without cancer symptoms was found in 80% and 65% of cases, respectively in the hormonally treated group and in the control group | [ |
| Estrogen and progesterone | HT formulation (estrogen alone, progesterone alone, combination of estrogen/progesterone) | 3 groups (≤1, 2–4, ≥5 years) | 261 ICC and 804 CIN3/CIS cases of post- and perimenopausal women | Significantly decreased the risk of ICC in peri- and postmenopausal women, but menopausal estrogens alone were associated with an increased risk of CIN3/CIS and combined HT was inversely associated with ICC | [ |
| ERT | — | 1–10 years | 645 women | Exogenous estrogens decreased the risk of cervical cancer | [ |
| Estrogens progestin | Oral conjugated equine estrogens, 0.625 mg/day, plus medroxyprogesterone acetate, 2.5 mg/day | 2 years | 2561 women | Did not significantly affect the incidence of cytologic abnormalities | [ |
| Anti-estrogen | Triphenylethylene antiestrogen tamoxifen | 10 days (20 or 40 mg/day) | 19 patients | Certain cervical carcinomas had changes in their proliferation and differentiation levels following tamoxifen administration | [ |
| Anti-estrogen | Tamoxifen | 10 mg per orally twice a day | 34 patients | The objective response rate was 11.1%, so tamoxifen appears to have minimal activity in non-squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix | [ |
| Progestagen | Combined oral contraceptives | <5 years and >5 years | 16,573 women | The risk of invasive cervical cancer increased with increasing duration of use, not for short time use | [ |
| Estrone, estradiol and | SHBG (20 nmol·L−1) estradiol (5 pg·mL−1) estrone (5 pg·mL−1) estrone sulphate (100 pg·mL−1) DHEAS 10 μg·dl−1 and progesterone 100·pg·mL−1 | 5–10 years of study | 11,742 women | Elevated plasma levels of endogenous estrogens or progesterone decrease the risk of cervical neoplasia | [ |
| HRT | — | 1 January, 2005 to 31 December 31 2015 | 222 women | 48% patients received counseling for HRT and then improved efforts to reduce disparities in the distribution of survivorship care | [ |
| ER modulator, Tamoxifen | 5% dextran-charcoal treated fetal bovine serum (D5) and 0, 1, 2.5, 5, 7.5, or 10 μM tamoxifen | 6 days | In vitro growth of three cell lines derived from carcinoma of the uterine cervix (HeLa, CaSki, ME-180) | Inhibited cell growth of the cervical carcinoma cell lines; 2.5 μM tamoxifen induced more than 60% growth inhibition where 5 μM tamoxifen was cytotoxic | [ |
| Estrogens and progestogens | Contraceptives (G03A), estrogens (G03C), progestogens (G03D), and progestogens and estrogens in combination (G03F). | 0.5 to 1 year after diagnosis | 171 (67%) of 257 women had at least one dispensing of HT (Hormonal Therapy) | Fewer than half of cervical cancer survivors with therapy-induced early menopause used HT | [ |
| Estradiol | 30 to 35 μg ethinylestradiol | From 1995 to 2014 | women aged 15 to 49 | The risk pattern among any hormonal and combined contraceptive users generally increased with longer duration of use and declined after stopping | [ |
Experimental and clinical studies of hormonal therapy to treat ovarian cancer.
| Name of Hormone | Formulation Name and Dose | Observation time | Study Model | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GnRHa | Leuprolide acetate (1 mg) | 8 weeks | 23 patients | Showed evidence of antitumor activity against refractory grade 1 epithelial adenocarcinoma of the ovary | [ |
| Aromatase inhibitor | Letrozole (2.5 mg daily) at the time of CA125 relapse | 12 weeks | 60 patients | Produced disease stabilization and CA125 responses that in turn are linked to higher levels of ER expression | [ |
| Aromatase inhibitor | Letrozole at a dose of 2.5 mg once a day | 27 patients | The aromatase inhibitor letrozole is an agent with some activity and limited toxicity for relapsed ovarian cancer. | [ | |
| Progestin | Megestrol acetate: 800 mg/day for 1 month followed by 400 mg/day as maintenance treatment | 1 month | 72 patients | This study does not suggest that the overall 10% benefit from hormonal therapy for chemotherapy refractory ovarian cancer will improve by increasing the dose | [ |
| Estrogen, progesterone | - | 2933 women | PR expression and ER expression were associated with improved disease-specific survival | [ | |
| Aromatase inhibitor | Oral everolimus 10 mg daily and letrozole 2.5 mg daily | 12 weeks of therapy with the combination of everolimus and letrozole | 20 patients | Associated with a promising (47%) progression-free survival rate in patients with ER-positive relapsed high-grade ovarian cancer | [ |
| Gonadotropin | Injection | 2003–2008 | 100 infertile clomiphene-citrate resistance women with POCS | Pregnancy and abortion rate in infertile women of PCOS receiving gonadotropin as a treatment for induction of ovulation seems to be more effective | [ |
| E1S | 20 pmol of [3H] E1S in 100 mL of Tris-HCl | (15 and 60 min) incubation time | 12 postmenopausal women | Conversion of circulating E1S to E2 by the tumor tissue could be one important reason for elevated S-E2 levels in postmenopausal women with non-estrogen-producing ovarian tumors | [ |
Experimental and clinical studies of hormonal therapy to treat uterine cancer.
| Name of Hormone | Formulation Name and Dose | Observation Time | Study Model | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aromatase Inhibitor | Anastrozole (1 mg/day), exemestane (25 mg/day)-1 patient, letrozole (2.5 mg/day) | 29.2 months | Patients with uterine sarcoma (4 patients with ESS, endometrial stromal sarcoma, and 3 patients with LMS) | Effective in the treatment of endometrial stromal sarcomas | [ |
| Progesterone | Medroxy progesterone acetate (36 patients; 44%) or megestrol acetate(28 patients; 35%), progestins | 24weeks | 81 patients | When disease recurs, carcinoma extending beyond the uterus is rare in patients reported with well-differentiated endometrial adenocarcinoma who undergo treatment with a progestational agent | [ |
| Estrogen, progestin, aromatase | ERT, tamoxifen, progestins, aromatase inhibitors | 4 to 164 months | 800 patients | MPA and letrozole, in particular, are highly effective and lead to sustained disease control in most cases | [ |
| Progestin, Aromatase | Megestrol acetate (MA), | 4+ to 252+ months (median 48+ months). | 11 patients | Hormonal treatment for measurable residual or recurrent low-grade ESS has a high response rate and should be considered as the treatment of choice for patients in which recurrent disease cannot easily be eliminated | [ |
| Exogenous or endogenous estrogen and progestins | Megestrol acetate 160 mg, progestins | 100 months | 22 patients | ERT was detrimental in patients with low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma, but progestin therapy should be routinely considered for adjuvant therapy and for the treatment of recurrent endometrial stromal sarcomas | [ |
| Progesterone | Medroxy progesterone acetate (MPA) | Dosing period 64 months (range 28–92 months) but follow-up period was 117 months | 13 patients | MPA therapy might be considered as a therapeutic option for residual or recurrent low-grade ESS and perhaps chosen as a first-line therapy | [ |
| Aromatase | Aromatase inhibitors used were letrozole (in 74% of patients), anastrozole (21%), and exemestane (6%) | Between 1998 and 2008 | 40 patients | Aromatase inhibitors achieved objective response in only 9%. Progression free survival was longer among patients with ER and/or PR positive tumors than among patients with ER and PR negative tumors | [ |
| GnRH agonist | GnRH agonist, leuprolide acetate, adriamycin, cisplatin, ifosfamide etc. | 15 months | A patient with menorrhagia, dysmenorrhea, and an enlarged uterus | GnRH therapy mask the symptoms of leiomyosarcomas, e.g., rapidly enlarging uterine mass, pelvic pain, uterovaginal bleeding | [ |
| Progestin and aromatase | Three cycles of BEP (bleomycin, etoposide, cisplatin), anastrozole and megestrol acetate | 2 years | 48-year-old woman was diagnosed with stage I endometrial stroma sarcoma | Endometrial stromal sarcoma with sex-cord stromal component may be hormonally functional and can be cured by treating with progestin and aromatase inhibitor | [ |
| Estrogen, progesterone | Megestrol acetate and tamoxifen | 6 months | A 22-year-old nullipara | 1 year after the last curettage, there is no evidence of disease | [ |
| Estrogen, progesterone | Combinations of megestrol acetate (160 mg/day), tamoxifen (30 mg/day), and GnRHa | 6 months | 9 patients with clinically diagnosed endometrial adenocarcinoma stage IA, grade 1 | Of the 9 patients, 8 (88.9%) achieved complete remission after hormone therapy. All nine patients have been alive without evidence of disease | [ |
| Estrogen, progesterone, | Megestrol (1-month), tamoxifen (20 mg/day) and depot leuprolide acetate subcutaneous injection (3.75 mg/month) | 6-months | A 36-year-old nulliparous woman | This case report signals a warning that negative clinical investigations are not reassuring for a relapsing endometrial adenocarcinoma failing conservative hormonal treatment | [ |
| Estrogen, progestin | 500 mg of oral medroxyprogesterone for 6 months, twice weekly | 9 months (range, 3–18 months) | 2 women | The quarterly interval for D&Cs was satisfactory with medroxyprogesterone treatment, and the patients’ desire not to undergo hysterectomy was met | [ |
Experimental and clinical studies of hormonal therapy to treat vaginal cancer.
| Name of Hormone | Formulation Name and Dose | Observation Time | Study Model | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estrogen (estrone sulfate) | Vaginal promestriene 10 mg soft vaginal suppository daily for one month | 1–6 months | 17 patients (after menopause) | The level of circulating E1S was not significantly affected by vaginal promestriene treatment, but a wide range of levels was noted pre- and post-treatment in individual patients | [ |
| E1S | ElS and DS | Incubation time for at least 2 h and with cell number up to 3.2 × 106 cells/mL | AC-258 cell line, squamous | Played a role in the development of tumors of the ovary and vagina | [ |
| Estradiol | Ultra-low-dose 10-microgram 17β-estradiol vaginal tablets | 52 weeks | ( | There was no increased risk of endometrial hyperplasia and carcinoma in postmenopausal women | [ |
| Estrogen | Local estrogen therapy (LET) in form of estradiol vaginal tablets, 10 μg, estradiol cream, 0.1 mg estradiol/g USP | 5-week period, from 6 March 2012 through 9 April 2012 | 423 women | There was greater compliance with vaginal tablets than with vaginal cream; respondents preferred their current treatment with the vaginal tablet | [ |
| Estrogen | ER modulator | 1 month | 32 postmenopausal women | Increased maturation, and ERα expression of the vaginal mucosa. These changes partially explained the improvement of symptoms of vaginal atrophy and cancer | [ |
| ER modulator | Ospemifene 30 or 60 mg/day | 12 weeks | 826 postmenopausal women were randomized | Effective and well tolerated for the treatment of the symptoms of vaginal dryness and dyspareunia associated with vulvovaginal atrophy over | [ |
Experimental and clinical studies of hormonal therapy to treat vulvar cancer.
| Name of Hormone | Formulation Name and Dose | Observation Time | Study Model | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estrogen, progesterone | Hormone replacement therapy | 12 months | 7189 women | Significantly decreased the proportion of women receiving at least one HRT prescription. The majority of vulvar cancers are not estrogen-dependent, and the prescription of HRT is not contraindicated after the diagnosis of this type of cancer | [ |
| ER modulator | Oral ospemifene 60 mg/day | 12 weeks | 605 women | Effective for the treatment of vulvar and vaginal atrophy and cancer in postmenopausal women with dyspareunia | [ |
| ER modulator | BZA 20 mg/CE 0.625 mg and 0.45 mg, BZA 20 mg | 12 weeks | Healthy postmenopausal women ( | Effective in treating moderate to severe VVA and vaginal symptoms. | [ |
| Estrogen and ER modulator | Conjugated estrogens 0.625 mg and 0.45 mg/BZA 20 mg | 2 years | 1583 and 1583 postmenopausal women respectively | Conjugated estrogens/BZA provides endometrial protection without increasing breast pain/density, vaginal bleeding, or ovarian cysts | [ |
| Estrogen and ER modulator | BZA 20 mg/CE 0.45 or 0.625 mg, BZA 20 mg. | 12 weeks | Postmenopausal, non-hysterectomized women ( | Shown to significantly improve sexual function and quality-of-life measures in symptomatic postmenopausal women | [ |
| Estradiol | Vaginal 4 μg and 10 μg estradiol (E2) | 12 weeks | 25 eligible women | Because of endometrial progesterone receptor expression, vaginal E2 would not be expected to stimulate endometrial hyperplasia leading to moderate to severe dyspareunia which is a symptom of vulvar and vaginal atrophy and cancer | [ |
| Selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) | 7.5 mg oral paroxetine or placebo daily | 16 weeks | 80 women | Paroxetine significantly reduced hot flashes in weekly frequency and severity in gynecological cancer survivors | [ |