New hypotheses and opportunities in endocrine therapy: amplification of oestrogen-induced apoptosis

V. Craig Jordan, Joan S. Lewis-Wambi, Roshani R. Patel, Helen Kim, Eric A. Ariazi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aims: To outline the progress being made in the understanding of acquired resistance to long term therapy with the selective oestrogen receptor modulators (SERMs, tamoxifen and raloxifene) and aromatase inhibitors. The question to be addressed is how we can amplify the new biology of oestrogen-induced apoptosis to create more complete responses in exhaustively antihormone treated metastatic breast cancer. Methods and Results: Three questions are posed and addressed. (1) Do we know how oestrogen works? (2) Can we improve adjuvant antihormonal therapy? (3) Can we enhance oestrogen-induced apoptosis? The new player in oestrogen action is GPR30 and there are new drugs specific for this target to trigger apoptosis. Similarly, anti-angiogenic drugs can be integrated into adjuvant antihormone therapy or to enhance oestrogen-induced apoptosis in Phase II antihormone resistant breast cancer. The goal is to reduce the development of acquired antihormone resistance or undermine the resistance of breast cancer cells to undergo apoptosis with oestrogen respectively. Finally, drugs to reduce the synthesis of glutathione, a subcellular molecule compound associated with drug resistance, can enhance oestradiol-induced apoptosis. Conclusions: We propose an integrated approach for the rapid testing of agents to blunt survival pathways and amplify oestrogen-induced apoptosis and tumour regression in Phase II resistant metastatic breast cancer. This Pharma platform will provide rapid clinical results to predict efficacy in large scale clinical trials.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)S10-S17
JournalBreast
Volume18
Issue numberSUPPL.3
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antihormone resistance
  • Apoptosis
  • Aromatase inhibitors
  • Oestradiol
  • Oestrogen receptor
  • Selective oestrogen receptor modulators
  • Tamoxifen
  • Targeted therapy

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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