Publication | Closed Access
Induction of covalent DNA adducts in rodents by tamoxifen.
256
Citations
15
References
1992
Year
Tamoxifen InjectionsOncologyAntiestrogen TamoxifenBreast OncologyMedicineOligonucleotideMolecular BiologyGynecologyBreast CancerPharmacotherapyCovalent DnaAnti-cancer AgentPharmacologyCancer ResearchEndocrine-related Cancer
The antiestrogen tamoxifen, increasingly used as adjuvant treatment for breast cancer, has been found to covalently modify DNA of rodents. For instance, the liver DNA of female Sprague-Dawley rats treated with a single injection of tamoxifen contained two DNA adducts. Four additional DNA adducts were formed and adduct concentrations increased 5- 7- and 10-15-fold after three and six tamoxifen injections, respectively, from levels observed after a single dose. The accumulation of DNA adducts with repeated administrations of tamoxifen to rodents may make this drug a poor choice for the chronic preventative treatment of breast cancer.
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