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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
New compounds were synthesized with the aim to develop new anti-estrogenic antitumor drugs. The biological properties of the molecules were screened by (1)
estrogen receptor
(ER) binding, (2) effect on MCF-7 cells, (3) uterotrophic effect and inhibition of estradiol induced uterotropic effect and (4) antitumor effect in DMBA induced rat mammary cancer. One of the molecules, Fc-1157a = toremifene, exhibited the following characteristics: competitive inhibition of [3H]estradiol binding to ER (IC50 = 0.3 mumol/l), inhibition of MCF-7 cell growth in a concentration-dependent manner and cell-killing effect at higher than 3 mumol/l concentrations. Minimal estrogenic dose of toremifene on rat uterus weight was about 40 times higher than that of tamoxifen. Toremifene had statistically significant effect against DMBA-induced rat mammary cancer. Further screening consisted of antitumor, pharmacokinetic and safety studies. Toremifene inhibited the growth of ER-negative, glucocorticoid sensitive, mouse uterine sarcoma in a dose-dependent manner. Pharmacokinetics and metabolism of toremifene resembled closely those of tamoxifen, but since the chlorine atom of the toremifene molecule was not metabolically cleaved tamoxifen and toremifene did not have chemically similar metabolites. Toremifene was well tolerated in animal toxicity studies. No hyperplastic or neoplastic nodules, which were seen in almost all high-dose (48 mg/kg for 24 weeks) tamoxifen-treated rats, were found in toremifene-treated rats (dose 48 mg/kg). In clinical phase I studies in healthy voluntary postmenopausal women, no side effects were reported, at doses less than or equal to 460 mg, neither after a single dose nor after five daily doses. At the dose of 680 mg two out of five persons experienced vertigo and
headache
. Toremifene, at the dose of 68 mg daily, had antiestrogenic effect on estradiol-induced human vaginal epithelial cells. Clinical phase II studies have confirmed that toremifene has a promising antitumor effect.
...
PMID:Review of the pharmacological properties of toremifene. 214 31
Aminoglutethimide (AG) was administered as palliative therapy in 112 patients with metastatic breast cancer. In 36 patients, the dose level was 1000 mg/day; 76 patients received a dose level of 500 mg/day. Patients with brain or liver metastasis were excluded, as were patients with tumors determined to be negative for estrogen receptors. Objective regression was observed in 35 (31%) patients, with the duration of response ranging from 4 to 36 + months (mean, 12 months; median, 10 months). Response was observed in 11 of 31 (35%) patients with soft tissue metastasis; 16/59 (27%) patients with osseous metastasis; and 8 of 22 (36%) having visceral metastasis. In 93 patients with positive
estrogen receptor
(ER), 33 responded (35%), whereas in 19 patients with unknown ER status, two responded (11%). Response to previous treatment with tamoxifen (TAM) had occurred in 31 patients; of these, response to AG was noted in 11 (35%). Of 24 patients failing to respond to prior treatment with tamoxifen, four (17%) responded to subsequent therapy with AG. Thirteen patients had previously received combination chemotherapy, and response to AG was noted in two (15%). The side effects observed in this study included skin rash in ten patients, fever in eight, somnolence in three, weakness and dizziness in one,
headache
in one, insomnia in one, dyspnea in one, and ataxia in one. Treatment had to be discontinued in eight patients, due to the severity of the side effects. As expected, patients receiving AG at the lower dose level of 500 mg/day experienced fewer and less severe side effects than those treated with the higher dose. The response rate in the 1000 mg/day group was 10/36 (28%) and in the 500 mg/day group, it was 25/76 (33%). The lower dosage was better tolerated without apparent compromise in therapeutic efficacy.
...
PMID:Aminoglutethimide in patients with metastatic breast cancer. 246 35
In order to determine the natural history and results of treatment of intracerebral metastases in solid-tumor patients, the records of 191 patients with an antemortem diagnosis of intracerebral metastasis made during the period from August 1974 to November 1978 were reviewed. Malignancies included lung (122 patients), breast (26), unknown primary (16), melanoma (8), colorectal (6), hypernephroma (4), and others (12). Favorable prognostic factors included solitary brain metastasis (P less than 0.001), ambulatory performance status (P less than 0.001), symptoms of
headache
(P less than 0.001), or visual disturbances (P less than 0.02), and
estrogen receptor
positivity in breast cancer patients (P = 0.055). Poor prognostic factors included advanced age (P less than 0.04) and evidence of impaired consciousness, i.e., disorientation, lethargy, stupor, or coma (P less than 0.007). Median survival time after diagnosis of intracerebral metastasis was 3.7 months for the entire series. In those patients with a single intracerebral metastasis and minimal tumor burden, the type of treatment used had a significant impact on survival. Those cases treated with surgery and radiation had a median survival time of 9.7 months versus 3.7 months for those treated with radiation alone (P less than 0.02). When using a proportional hazard regression analysis to adjust for the three most important prognostic factors, treatment (surgery and radiation versus radiation alone) still appeared to be important. Intracerebral metastases were the immediate or contributing cause of death in 50% of the patients in this series. Patients at greater risk of dying of intracerebral metastases included those in whom the brain was the first site of distant metastasis, those with an intracerebral metastasis from an unknown primary site, and those whose presentation of malignancy was with symptoms of a brain metastasis. Although the therapeutic goal in intracerebral metastases is generally palliative, it appears that there are categories of cases that may benefit from more aggressive treatment.
...
PMID:Intracerebral metastases in solid-tumor patients: natural history and results of treatment. 723 7
Exemestane is an irreversible, steroidal, oral aromatase inhibitor under evaluation in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer. A phase I study was conducted in 27 postmenopausal patients who were candidates for hormone therapy because they had advanced breast cancer and
estrogen receptor
-positive or unknown status. Most patients were moderately or heavily pretreated. Cohorts of at least three patients received sequentially escalating daily oral doses of 5-600 mg. The median duration of exemestane treatment was 13 weeks (range: 3-166 weeks). The maximal tolerated dose was not reached because of lack of treatment-related grade 3 or 4 toxicity. The most common adverse events, including those not related to treatment, were mild to moderate
headache
(44% of patients), dizziness (33%), nausea (33%), hot flushes (30%) and tumor-related pain (30%). There were three complete and four partial responses for an objective response rate of 26% (95% CI: 11.1-46.3%) in the intent-to-treat population; the median duration of response was 74 weeks (95% CI: 48-99 weeks). Exemestane, at the dose of 25 mg, maximally suppressed estradiol, estrone and estrone sulfate serum levels to 13, 5 and 10% of baseline, respectively. Exemestane appears to suppress estrogen, be well tolerated and have antitumor activity in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer. A large, safe therapeutic window of up to 600 mg was defined. In view of its safety and estrogen-suppression profiles, the most favorable effects were observed at the 25 mg daily dose.
...
PMID:Safety, activity and estrogen inhibition by exemestane in postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer: a phase I study. 982 25
Third-generation aromatase inhibitors are able to reduce circulating plasma estrogen concentrations in postmenopausal women to below detectable limits and significantly inhibit aromatase, the enzyme responsible for estrogen synthesis, in normal breast tissue and breast tumors. Their role in the treatment of advanced breast cancer is well established and their use in adjuvant therapy is currently being explored. On the basis of these trials, evaluation of these inhibitors in the prevention of breast cancer may be appropriate. Aromatase inhibitors have non-specific toxic side effects including (but not limited to): asthenia,
headache
, nausea, peripheral edema, fatigue, vomiting and dyspepsia. In addition, certain endocrinological side effects in postmenopausal women are notable, namely hot flushes and vaginal dryness. In advanced breast cancer, these side effects result in treatment withdrawal in few (<4%) women. Of concern, however, are the potential long-term endocrinological side effects in women receiving treatment as first-line adjuvant therapy or in sequence or combination with tamoxifen or other selective
estrogen receptor
modulators (SERMs). Current studies of adjuvant treatments for breast cancer in healthy women are carefully evaluating, in addition to general toxicities, the effects on bone, lipid metabolism, cardiovascular risk, quality of life and menopausal symptoms. Careful evaluation of all-cause morbidity and mortality is necessary to plan trials and justify long-term use of aromatase inhibitors in the treatment or prevention of breast cancer in healthy women.
...
PMID:Risks versus benefits in the clinical application of aromatase inhibitors. 1073 Nov 26
Fulvestrant (Faslodex) is a novel
estrogen receptor
(ER) antagonist that competitively binds to the ER with a much greater affinity than that of tamoxifen. The downregulation of cellular levels of the ER protein results in complete abrogation of estrogen-sensitive gene transcription. This distinct mechanism of action ensures a lack of cross resistance with other hormonal agents and, in contrast to tamoxifen, fulvestrant has no known estrogen-agonist effects. Fulvestrant is administered via monthly intramuscular injections (250mg) and is recommended for the treatment of hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer in postmenopausal women with disease progression following antiestrogen therapy. The efficacy of fulvestrant was similar to that of the aromatase inhibitor anastrozole (1 mg/day) in two, well designed studies in postmenopausal women with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer that had progressed during prior antiestrogen therapy. Time to disease progression (primary endpoint) and treatment failure, rates of objective response and clinical benefit, overall survival and quality of life were similar in patients treated with fulvestrant or anastrozole. In retrospective noninferiority analyses, fulvestrant was at least as effective as anastrozole in all randomised patients, and in those with or without visceral metastases. Fulvestrant is generally well tolerated and was tolerated as well as anastrozole in clinical trials. Treatment-related adverse events were mostly mild to moderate and led to treatment withdrawal in about 1% of patients who received fulvestrant or anastrozole. The main adverse effects associated with therapy are nausea, asthenia, pain, vasodilation and
headache
.In conclusion, monthly intramuscular injections of fulvestrant are at least as effective and as well tolerated as oral anastrozole once daily in the treatment of postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer that has progressed on prior antiestrogen therapy. Because of a different mode of action to that of other hormonal agents, fulvestrant is effective in the treatment of tamoxifen-resistant disease and, unlike tamoxifen, has no known estrogen agonist effects. Thus, fulvestrant provides an effective and well tolerated option for the treatment of hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer in postmenopausal women with disease progression following antiestrogen therapy.
...
PMID:Fulvestrant: a review of its use in hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer in postmenopausal women with disease progression following antiestrogen therapy. 1501 96
Raloxifene, a selective
estrogen receptor
modulator (SERM) licensed for the prevention of non-traumatic vertebral fractures in postmenopausal women at increased risk of osteoporosis, was launched in the UK in August 1998. The aim of the study was to monitor the safety of raloxifene prescribed in the primary care setting in England using prescription-event monitoring (PEM). Patients were identified by means of prescription data supplied by the Prescription Pricing Authority between September 1998 and November 2000. Demographic and clinical event data were collected from questionnaires posted to primary care physicians (GPs) at least 6 months after the date of the first prescription for each patient. Information on medical events, suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs), reasons for stopping treatment, pregnancies, and causes of death was requested. Event rates [Incidence Densities (IDs): no. first reports /1000 patient-months of treatment] were calculated. Differences between IDs for events reported in month one (ID(1)) and months 2-6 (ID(2-6)) of treatment were examined. The cohort comprised 13,987 patients [median age 62 years (IQR 55,69); 99.8% female]. The major indication was osteoporosis (40.9%, n=5725). Flushing was the event with the highest ID in month 1 (22.8), reported most frequently by GPs as an ADR to raloxifene (67/461 reports) and as the reason for stopping (700/4592 reports). Events associated with starting treatment included flushing, malaise/lassitude,
headache
/migraine, nausea/vomiting, sweating, cramp, pain abdomen, dizziness, diarrhea, mastalgia and vaginal hemorrhage. Less common events reported during treatment included deep vein thrombosis (n=13), pulmonary embolism (n=13), thrombophlebitis (n=31) and visual disturbance (n=29). In this study, there were 122 (0.9%) confirmed deaths, of which 32 causes of death were unknown. This study shows that raloxifene is generally well tolerated when used in general practice in England. Potential signals of unrecognised ADRs requiring further evaluation included gastrointestinal adverse symptoms and vaginal hemorrhage. There were also a small number of reports of events associated with venous thromboembolism and visual disorders that require further investigation.
...
PMID:Safety profile of raloxifene as used in general practice in England: results of a prescription-event monitoring study. 1530 82
TAS-108 is a novel steroidal antiestrogen compound that has a strong binding affinity to the
estrogen receptor
and, in preclinical studies, has antitumor activity against tamoxifen-resistant breast cancer cell lines. Its molecular mechanisms of actions are different from those of tamoxifen and fulvestrant. TAS-108 showed tissue-selective agonist activity in the bone and cardiovascular systems and, in preclinical and phase I studies, did not show any effect on the endometrium. In a phase I study, TAS-108 was well tolerated at doses ranging from 40 to 160 mg/d with no maximum tolerated dose. Toxicities included hot flashes,
headache
, and nausea and vomiting. The drug has linear pharmacokinetics. In the phase I study, there was evidence of biological antitumor activity, with stable disease noted in several patients. A phase II study is ongoing, and phase III studies are being planned with the drug.
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PMID:TAS-108: a novel steroidal antiestrogen. 1570 85
The occurrence of vasomotor symptoms in women is directly related to deficiency of estrogen, which occurs as a result of natural or surgical menopause. Hot flushes may also be a major problem for patients with a history of breast cancer, as they may result directly from cancer treatment (oophorectomy, chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure or adjuvant tamoxifen citrate therapy). Despite the lack of reliable data regarding their efficacy and safety, in recent years the usage of herbs among menopausal women has increased dynamically all over the world. The following paper reviews professional literature about Black Cohosh (Actaea/Cimicifuga racemosa), either used alone or in combination with other medicinal herbs administered in management of vasomotor symptoms. Extracts of the rootstock of Black cohosh contain such potentially biologically active constituents as triterpene glycosides (actein, cimicifugoside, deoxyacetein), isoferulic acid and alkaloids (n-methylcytisine). The mechanism of its action remains unclear. Some authors suggest that Black Cohosh contains substances with selective
estrogen receptor
modulator (SERM) activity. Recent data has demonstrated that Black Cohosh may have an effect on dopaminergic and serotoninergic systems. Thirty-two papers formed the basis for this review. Open-label, noncomparative studies, as well as treatment-controlled, randomized, open trials, have proven that Black Cohosh significantly reduced frequency or severity of hot flashes. The results of randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trials were contradictory. Adverse symptoms have been rare (5,4%), mild and reversible. Most of them included gastrointestinal upsets, rashes,
headaches
, dizziness and mastalgia. Nevertheless, single cases of serious adverse events, including acute hepatocellular damage, have been reported, but without a clear causality relationship.
...
PMID:[Efficacy and safety of Black cohosh (Actaea/Cimicifuga racemosa) in the treatment of vasomotor symptoms--review of clinical trials]. 1859 68
Objective. The goal of treating recurrent ovarian cancer is disease control while minimizing toxicity. Fulvestrant, a novel
estrogen receptor
(ER) antagonist, has proven clinically beneficial and well-tolerated in treating recurrent breast cancer. Ovarian cancer often expresses ER and may respond to anti-estrogen therapy. We evaluated fulvestrant in women with recurrent ovarian or primary peritoneal cancer. Methods. Patients with ER-positive, multiply recurrent ovarian or primary peritoneal carcinoma and either measurable disease according to RECIST criteria or an abnormal and rising CA-125 were eligible for enrollment. Treatment consisted of single agent fulvestrant, 500 mg IM on Day 1, 250 mg IM on Day 15, and 250 mg IM on Day 29 and every 28 days thereafter until either intolerance or disease progression. Disease response was assessed by monthly physical exams and CA-125 levels as well as CT scans bimonthly. The primary endpoint was clinical benefit (CB=complete response (CR)+partial response (PR)+stable disease (SD)) at 90 days. Results. Thirty-one women were enrolled and 26 women (median age of 61) met inclusion criteria and received at least one dose. Patients had received a median of 5 prior chemotherapeutic regimens (range: 2-13). We observed one CR (4%), one PR (4%), and 9 patients with SD (35%) using modified-Rustin criteria (CA-125 level). Using modified-RECIST criteria 13 patients (50%) achieved SD. The median time to disease progression was 62 days (mean 86 days). Grade 1 toxicity included
headache
(1 patient) and bromidrosis (2 patients). Conclusions. Fulvestrant is well-tolerated and efficacious. Objective response rates are low, but disease stabilization was common.
...
PMID:A phase II study of fulvestrant in the treatment of multiply-recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer. 1923 74
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