Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0600142 (hot flushes)
1,242 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
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PMID:Risks versus benefits in the clinical application of aromatase inhibitors. 1073 Nov 26

Microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP 450) enzyme aromatase belongs to CYP 19 super family. It is involved in the conversion of androgens to estrogens. In postmenopausal women the main sites of aromatisation are skin, adipose tissue and breast. Aromatase localized in breast tumor produces sufficient estrogen for its proliferation. Hence it is an important target for the treatment of hormone dependent breast cancer in postmenopausal women. There are mainly two types of aromatase inhibitors, one is steroidal another is nonsteroidal type. The first and second generation aromatase inhibitors encounter the undesirable drug- drug interactions besides being not very specific and plagued with pharmacokinetic problems. Third generation aromatase inhibitors developed recently are more potent and specific with a greater capacity to annihilate circulating estrogen levels. These agents have satisfactory pharmacokinetic profiles and are devoid of major drug-drug interactions. Third generation aromatase inhibitors became drugs of choice for both first and second line treatment of advanced breast cancer. Aromatase inhibitors can also be used for neoadjuvant therapy of breast cancer in which they have achieved better therapeutic efficacy than tamoxifen. Early results of ATAC (Armidex Tamoxifen Alone or Combination) trial suggest that anastrozole is superior to tamoxifen in adjuvant setting for disease free survival, particularly in receptor positive patients, and in reducing the incidence of contralateral breast cancer. Therapeutic potential of aromatase inhibitors stretches beyond the postmenopausal breast cancer treatment as they also play a role in the treatment of estrogen dependent benign and malignant conditions such as gynaecomastia, prostate cancer, fibroadenomata and the induction of ovulation. By virtue of their ability to reduce estrogen levels they pose problems like demineralization of bone, hot flushes and anti-implantation effects.
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PMID:Aromatase inhibitors: a new paradigm in breast cancer treatment. 1557 17

The aromatase inhibitors deplete oestrogen by inhibiting aromatase, the enzyme that synthesises oestrogen from androgens. They are effective as therapies for breast cancer only in postmenopausal women whose tumours express oestrogen or progesterone receptors. As adjuvant therapy, tamoxifen and the aromatase inhibitors have similar efficacy in the first 5 years of treatment. Aromatase inhibitors can be used as an alternative to tamoxifen in women with symptomatic intolerance or a contraindication to tamoxifen. Early data suggest that switching to an aromatase inhibitor after 2-5 years of tamoxifen therapy is beneficial in women with high-risk disease. Aromatase inhibitors are associated with more hot flushes than placebo, but with fewer hot flushes, less endometrial toxicity and venous thromboembolism, and more arthralgia, myalgia and bone fracture than tamoxifen.
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PMID:The aromatase inhibitors in early breast cancer: who, when, and why? 1639 38