Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D00573 (Zoladex)
260 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From May 1987 to May 1989 sixty one pre- and perimenopausal women with advanced or recurrent breast cancer entered in an open non comparative study. They were treated, as a first-line therapy, with goserelin (Zoladex ICI-118630) a long acting gonadotropin-releasing hormone (LH-RH)-analogue in a depot formulation. Fifty three patients were evaluable for response; median age at entry was 41 years (range 28-56). Serum concentrations of 17 beta estradiol, LH and FSH were significantly suppressed within the first four weeks of therapy and remained suppressed for the whole duration of treatment. Subjective responses were observed, such as pain reduction and/or performance status improvement in 58% of patients. Overall objective response (CR + PR) occurred in 16 (30.2%) patients in all major sites of disease with a median time to response of 12 weeks (range 8 to 48 weeks) and a lifetable median duration of response of 36 weeks (range 16 to 76 weeks). The lifetable median time to progression was 17 weeks (range 5 to 76 weeks). Goserelin depot was well tolerated with no withdrawal due to possible adverse reactions. The observed subjective and objective response rates are comparable to those induced by surgical oophorectomy. Goserelin provides a well tolerated medical alternative to ovarian ablation, without the morbidity associated to surgery. In conclusion the present paper suggests that this innovative chemical estrogen deprivation, in premenopausal breast cancer patients, might be favorably investigated as an adjuvant therapy in future clinical trials.
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PMID:LH-RH analogue Zoladex in the treatment of pre- and perimenopausal women with metastatic breast cancer (results of the Italian Cooperative Study). 183 30

The patient was a 38-year-old woman who was diagnosed as having right breast cancer (T1aN1bM0, stage II) at the age of 36 when she underwent right mastectomy. Postoperative adjuvant therapy was performed using UFT and tamoxifen. After 2 years and 4 months, pulmonary metastasis was diagnosed from elevated tumor markers and chest X-P. After the relapse, treatment with goserelin acetate (Zoladex) and CPA was started. After 2 months of this treatment, the tumor in the lung had shrunk in size, and after 5 months partial remission (PR) was evaluated from improvements in chest X-P and normalization of tumor markers, This PR condition continues at present. A case report is presented of a patient with premenopausal recurrent breast cancer in whom good results were obtained by concomitant administration of Zoladex and CPA.
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PMID:[Improvement of recurrent lung metastasis of breast cancer by Zoladex and cyclophosphamide]. 771 24

The use of adjuvant endocrine therapy in the treatment of hormone receptor-positive, early breast cancer has become important in both pre- and postmenopausal women. Tamoxifen has been the principal adjuvant hormonal therapy in pre- and postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer for nearly 20 years. Recent data in premenopausal women suggest benefit from ovarian ablation with or without tamoxifen. Early results from the 'Arimidex', Tamoxifen, Alone or in Combination (ATAC) trial have demonstrated that the third-generation, selective aromatase inhibitor (AI) anastrozole ('Arimidex') is a suitable alternative adjuvant therapy for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive disease. After recurrence or relapse on adjuvant endocrine therapy, responses to the sequential use of additional endocrine agents are common. The increase in the number of options now available for adjuvant therapy will have important implications for the selection of the optimal sequence of endocrine agents in the treatment of recurrent breast cancer. Menopausal status is an important factor in determining the endocrine therapy that a patient receives. For premenopausal women, tamoxifen and/or a luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone agonist such as goserelin ('Zoladex') are both options for adjuvant endocrine treatment. After progression on adjuvant and first-line tamoxifen, ovarian ablation is an appropriate second-line therapy. For premenopausal women who have undergone ovarian ablation, the use of third-line therapy with an AI becomes possible. For postmenopausal women, a wide choice of endocrine treatment options is available and an optimal sequence has yet to be determined. Options for first-line therapy of metastatic disease include an AI for women who have received adjuvant tamoxifen or tamoxifen for patients who have received adjuvant anastrozole. In addition, data suggest that fulvestrant ('Faslodex'), a novel estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist that downregulates the ER protein and has no known agonist effects, is a promising therapeutic option that has shown efficacy in the treatment of postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer. Other agents that may be used in the sequence include the steroidal AI exemestane and the progestin megestrol acetate. The widening range of adjuvant endocrine options therefore represents an opportunity to prolong patient benefits in the treatment of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer, and will require the further refinement of the optimal sequence of endocrine agents for the treatment of recurrent breast cancer.
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PMID:Sequential hormonal therapy for metastatic breast cancer after adjuvant tamoxifen or anastrozole. 1453 31