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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (
bone metastases
)
6,382
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten previously untreated postmenopausal women with metastatic breast cancer, none of whom had received prior systemic therapy, were treated with the luteinising hormone releasing hormone (LHRH) analogue D-Ser(But)6, Azgly10-LHRH (
ICI
118630). Two obtained an objective partial remission, one in
bone metastases
and one in lung metastases. One patient proved unassessable. Amongst the seven failures, incomplete pituitary gonadotrophin suppression over the relatively short treatment period with the daily injections was noted. The seven patients failing
ICI
118630 received tamoxifen and two with high tumour oestrogen receptor values responded. LHRH analogues may provide a novel endocrine therapy for postmenopausal breast cancer although more data are needed. In this study, the monthly depot injection proved superior to daily injections with regard to gonadotrophin suppression, although it is not clear that this provides the mechanism of action.
...
PMID:Remission of postmenopausal breast cancer during treatment with the luteinising hormone releasing hormone agonist ICI 118630. 294 37
Tamoxifen is the standard first-line endocrine therapy for breast cancer, but recent data indicate that it is likely to be replaced by the effective aromatase inhibitors (AIs), in both the metastatic and adjuvant settings. Aromatase inhibitors induce complete oestrogen deprivation that leads to clinically significant bone loss. Several ongoing or planned trials combine AIs with bisphosphonates, even more so that recent data reveal that clodronate may reduce the incidence of
bone metastases
and prolong survival in the adjuvant setting. Bisphosphonates can inhibit breast cancer cell growth in vitro, but they have never been studied in steroid-free medium (SFM), an in vitro environment that mimics the effects of AIs in vivo. Quite surprisingly, in SFM, clodronate stimulated MCF-7 cell growth in a time- and dose-dependent manner by up to two-fold (crystal violet staining assay), whereas it had no mitogenic activity in complete medium. The bisphosphonate similarly increased the proliferation of IBEP-2 cells, which also express a functional oestrogen receptor (ER), while it weakly inhibited the growth of the ER-negative MDA-MB-231 cells. Expectedly, 17beta-oestradiol stimulated the growth of MCF-7 and IBEP-2 cells cultured in SFM, and had no effect on MDA-MB-231 cells. Moreover, partial (4-OH-tamoxifen) and pure antioestrogens (fulvestrant,
ICI
182,780), in combination with clodronate, completely suppressed the mitogenic effect of the bisphosphonate, suggesting that it was mediated by an activation of ER. In accordance with this view, clodronate induced ER downregulation, weakly increased progesterone receptor expression, and stimulated the transcription of an oestrogen-responsive reporter gene. In conclusion, we report a previously unknown stimulatory effect of clodronate on MCF-7 cells grown in SFM, in vitro conditions that are potentially relevant to the use of AIs for breast cancer. Moreover, our data suggest that ER is involved in these effects of clodronate on cancer cell growth.
...
PMID:Steroid-free medium discloses oestrogenic effects of the bisphosphonate clodronate on breast cancer cells. 1547 66