Publication | Closed Access
Type of estrogen receptor determines response to antiestrogen therapy.
57
Citations
11
References
1996
Year
Molecular PharmacologyOncologyTamoxifen TreatmentVariant Estrogen ReceptorsMedicineTumor GrowthHormonal ReceptorEstrogen ReceptorPathologyPharmacotherapyCancer TreatmentEndocrinologyPharmacologyCancer GrowthTumor MicroenvironmentEndocrine-related Cancer
Failure of tamoxifen treatment for unresectable hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) might be caused by variant estrogen receptors (ERs) in some of these tumors. We therefore planned a study in which antihormonal therapy was done with 80 mg/day tamoxifen or 160 mg/day megestrol according to the presence of wild-type or exon 5-deleted variant ER transcripts. Growth rate (evaluated by MRI) of HCCs characterized by variant ER transcripts was 4 times more rapid than that of HCCs with wild-type ERs. Tumor volume in all patients with wild-type ERs was halved after 9 months of tamoxifen treatment, whereas megestrol in patients with variant ERs only slowed down tumor growth. Choosing antihormonal treatment according to the presence of wild-type or variant ERs in the tumor definitely improves the response rate to tamoxifen; in patients with tumors bearing variant ERs, megestrol causes only a temporary inhibition of tumor growth.
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