New Drug Promising for Advanced Breast Cancer
Published:
5 October 2003 y., Sunday
A drug called exemestane may be a more effective first-line agent than tamoxifen for postmenopausal women with advanced breast cancer, European researchers report.
Tamoxifen works by blocking the effects of estrogen on tumor cells and is the most widely prescribed drug for breast cancer treatment.
Exemestane -- which is a member of a newer class of drugs called aromatase inhibitors -- decreases the overall amount of estrogen in the body. Both tamoxifen and aromatase inhibitors only work in patients who have breast tumors that carry hormone receptors, meaning that estrogen fuels the cancer growth.
Exemestane is currently approved for the treatment of advanced breast cancer in postmenopausal women whose tumors no longer respond to tamoxifen.
To see if exemestane would be an effective first-line agent, Dr. Robert Paridaens of the Universitair Ziekenhuis in Leuven, Belgium, and others randomly assigned 120 postmenopausal women with breast cancer that had spread to other areas of the body to daily treatment with exemestane 25 mg or tamoxifen 20 mg.
Independent reviewers, who didn't know which woman had been given what treatment, saw improvement in 41 percent of women treated with exemestane compared to just 17 percent of women treated with tamoxifen.
Šaltinis:
tehrantimes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The aggressive marketing of cigarettes in the developing world is a key factor in a predicted rise of global cancer rates over the next 20 years
more »
International health experts are hunting for the virus that causes SARS, the flu-like disease that has killed 61 people worldwide
more »
NASA has awarded $19.4 million in funding for 20 new IT research and development programs
more »
Cyber-savvy Estonia, an ex-Soviet republic that has embraced information technology with the velocity of a Baltic Sea storm, will now teach other former communist states to do the same
more »
Russia is on the brink of an AIDS catastrophe, experts say, that could lead to infection rates rarely seen outside sub-Saharan Africa
more »
Skulls Found in Africa and in Europe Challenge Theories of Human Origins
more »
Lithuania Among the World’s Fifty Three Most Developed Countries
more »
A Tibetan graduate student is scheduled to lecture on Tibetan medicine at Harvard University for three months starting from early September
more »
Having a healthy diet, exercising and not being overweight can not only reduce the risk of developing heart disease, but may also protect against Alzheimer's, new research claims
more »
AIDS researchers have announced a possible breakthrough with the discovery of a naturally occurring gene that effectively blocks the disease's progress
more »