Aromatase inhibitors and other novel agents in breast cancer treatment.
Thirty years after the introduction of tamoxifen, which was expanded from palliation of metastatic cancer to recent application for chemoprevention, the primacy of this drug as the mainline pharmacological intervention is currently being challenged by the third generation aromatase inhibitors and inactivators. In contrast to the oestrogen receptor blockade provided by tamoxifen, aromatase inhibitors result in deprivation of oestrogens in postmenopausal women both through paracrine/intracrine and endocrine modulation. Experimental evidence has shown a significant (97-99%) reduction of in vivo aromatase activity and an equal or sometimes better antitumour activity compared with megestrol acetate when these drugs are used as second-line treatment for metastatic breast cancer. Recent pivotal studies in first-line settings comparing tamoxifen for metastatic breast cancer and preliminary results from the neoadjuvant trials demonstrate that third generation aromatase inhibitors are superior to tamoxifen. With a better understanding of local tissue production of oestrogen through oestrone sulfatase, which hydrolyses oestrone sulfate to oestrone, and 17-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase Type 1, which in turn catalyses the reduction of oestrone to oestradiol, more powerful tactics for oestrogen starvation of cancer may be realised in future.[1]References
- Aromatase inhibitors and other novel agents in breast cancer treatment. Saji, S., Toi, M. Expert opinion on emerging drugs. (2002) [Pubmed]
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