Targeted Agents & Hormone therapy Flashcards
Name the types of targeted agents
Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors: Sunitinib (sutent), Erlotinib
Monoclonal antibodies: Trastuzumab/Herceptin, Rituximab, Ipilimumab
mTor inhibitors: Temsirolimus, Everolimus
When is Herceptin used?
HER2 breast Ca
Adjuvant & metastatic treatment
When is Ipilimumab used?
Metastatic melanoma
Blocks regulatory immune function achieving remission/response
Why are drugs interactions important to consider with tyrosine kinase inhibitors?
Metabolised by the liver via CYP pathways
When is Sunitinib used?
Anti-VEGFR (block cell growth factors & angiogenesis)
Palliative treatment of renal cell Ca, Pancreatic neuroendocrine, GI stromal
When is Erlotinib used?
Anti-EGFR
Non-small cell lung cancer with EGFR mutation
What does chronic dosing lead to?
- Chronic toxicity: Low grade symptoms (mild diarrhoea, taste disturbance)
- Emergent toxicity: SE only apparent after months of treatment (thyroid)
- Risk of drug interactions
- Mounting cost
When is hormone treatment used?
All stages of cancer:
- Shrink primary tumour (neoadjuvant/primary)
- Prevent or delay the growth of micro metastases following surgery (adjuvant)
- Shrink established metastases and improve quality and duration of life (Palliative)
How do hormone therapies work?
Part of the steroid family
Interact with cytoplasmic protein receptors to form functional DNA transcription factors, affecting the transcription of multiple genes
What is the most direct hormone therapy?
Removal of the source of growth-promoting hormone
Bilateral oophorectomy in pre-menopausal women
Bilateral orchidectomy
How is reversible medical castration achieved in men & women and how does this work?
Use of long-acting LHRH analogues (Goserelin, Leuprorelin)
Receptor down-regulation in the pituitary, block LH and FSH production and, in turn, gonadal hormone output.
Why is medical castration not suitable in postmenopausal women?
Sex hormone production extra-gonadal: Fat & adrenal glands
How do hormone inhibitors work? Give an example
Tamoxifen
Block the binding of hormones to their receptors in tumour cells
What are the 2 types of anti-androgens?
Steroidal: Cyproterone Acetate
Inhibit the androgen receptor & in the hypothalamus they substitute for testosterone, so stimulate negative feedback inhibition= dec LHRH
Non-steroidal: Bicalutamide
Inhibit testosterone in both tumour cells and hypothalamus, so feedback inhibition is lost and serum testosterone levels rise.
What is the maximum androgen blockade?
Combination of a non-steroidal anti-androgen with an LHRH analogue strategy used in prostate cancer