0422 - Hormones and Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are some hormone-related cancers?

A
Breast
Prostate
Uterine (endometrial)
Ovarian
Thyroid
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2
Q

Which hormone is most closely related to increasing breast cancer risk?

A

Oestregon.

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3
Q

How can you predict whether a patient will respond to endocrine therapy for breast cancer?

A

ER/PgR positivity (75% are HR positive)
Long Disease-free interval (diagnosis to metastasis)
Mets to bone and soft tissue instead of viscera

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4
Q

What are some drugs that are used as endocrine therapy for breast cancer?

A

Tamoxifen (oestrogen receptor antagonist) - mostly for premenopausal women.
Aromatase inhibitors - even better, but only for postmenopausal (premenopausal contradicted)
Ovarian function suppression (premenopausal only) - LHRH agonists, stimulate for 24 hours then ‘overload’ and stop LH release, silencing ovaries.

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5
Q

Briefly outline tamoxifen

A

Non-steroidal antioestrogen - binds to ER which translocates to nucleus and thus unable to receive oestrogen.
Given orally
Oestrogen antagonist, BUT partial agonist in bone, blood, and endometrium.
Effective in pre- and postmenopausal women.
Well tolerated, but increase risk of thromboembolism and endometrial cancer

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6
Q

How do aromatase inhibitors work?

A

Prevent peripheral conversion of androstenedione to oestrone or testosterone to oestradiol
Aromatase in breast tumour, muscle, fat, skin, liver
Thus reduce circulating oestrogens which could stimulate tumour growth.

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7
Q

What are three aromatase inhibitors?

A

Anastrozole, Letrozole (non-steroidal)

Exemestane (steroidal)

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