0422 - Hormones and Cancer Flashcards
What are some hormone-related cancers?
Breast Prostate Uterine (endometrial) Ovarian Thyroid
Which hormone is most closely related to increasing breast cancer risk?
Oestregon.
How can you predict whether a patient will respond to endocrine therapy for breast cancer?
ER/PgR positivity (75% are HR positive)
Long Disease-free interval (diagnosis to metastasis)
Mets to bone and soft tissue instead of viscera
What are some drugs that are used as endocrine therapy for breast cancer?
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.
Briefly outline tamoxifen
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
How do aromatase inhibitors work?
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.
What are three aromatase inhibitors?
Anastrozole, Letrozole (non-steroidal)
Exemestane (steroidal)