Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.6.1 (
sulfatase
)
3,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Extensive hormonal evaluation was performed in a girl with adrenal carcinoma during the primary tumor stage, following adrenalectomy, during the period when metastases were evident and while on treatment with o,p'-DDD. At the age of 14 months a diagnosis of congenital adrenal hyperplasia was made and treatment with dexamethasone (0.125 to 0.25 mg/day) resulted in a fall-off in growth rate, normal advancement in bone age, decrease in virilization and suppression of 17- ketosteroid excretion which continued until 4 3/12 years of age when virilization increased. At five years of age elevated serum and urinary androgen levels unsuppressible with dexamethasone were noted. Following removal of a large right adrenal carcinoma, serum and urinary hormone levels returned to normal. There months following surgery,
liver metastases
were documented associated with elevated levels of serum androgens. With o,p'-DDD treatment, serum dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DS) and urinary 17-ketosteroid (17-KS) excretion fell rapidly while there was a delay in the fall of free androgens. The persistence of free steroid secretion with decreased formation of DS suggests that the o,p'-DDD may have altered
sulfatase
activity before causing tumor necrosis and total decrease in steroidogenesis.
...
PMID:Virilizing adrenal tumor in a child suppressed with dexamethasone for three years. Effect of o,p'-DDD on serum and urinary androgens. 13 87
Tamoxifen is a synthetic nonsteroidal drug with antiestrogenic properties. This report describes the response of patients with metastatic breast cancer to tamoxifen and correlates clinical responses with tumor tissue content of cytoplasmic estrogen binding proteins (EBPs) and other biochemical parameters. Ages of patients ranged from 27 to 82 years. 7 patients were premenopausal, 63 postmenopausal, and 2 had recent endocrine ablaetion. Prior hormone therapy, radiotherapy, or chemotherapy ahd been given to all patients. Tamoxifen was given at a dose of 20 mg orally for a minimum of 4 weeks and continued if an objective remission was shown. Before therapy a biopsy specimen was taken for determination of EBP and for specific enzyme activities. Another biopsy specimen was taken for at least 8 weeks after therapy. A total of 72 patients were treated for at least 4 weeks. The overall response rate was 38%. Most frequent responses were in the over-70 age group. The median duration of response has been 9.5 months. Bony involvement responded to therapy in 21 of 28 patients. No responses were shown in 6 patients with
liver metastases
. Only 1 of 18 patients who had previous chemotherapy responded. Of 31 who had no prior chemotherapy, 73% achieved a remission. There was a 44% correlation between patients with a positive EBP assay and response to therapy, but none in EBP-negative patients. In this study 20 of 28 patients had normal
arylsulfatase B
/DNA ratios in their tumor tissue and 11 of the 20 responded to tamoxifen therapy. Patients who responded most favorably to therapy had normal G-6-PD activities. It is concluded that tamoxifen therapy may cancel the need for ablative surgery in postmenopausal patients with positive EBPs and who have had a prior response to additive hormonal treatment.
...
PMID:Therapeutic use of tamoxifen in advanced breast cancer: correlation with biochemical parameters. 19 Nov 85