Presurgical (neoadjuvant) endocrine therapy is a useful model to predict response and outcome to endocrine treatment in breast cancer patients
► Presurgical endocrine treatment (PSET) is a good clinical research model. ► PSET may predict response/outcome of breast cancer patients with some limitations. ► Future PSET-studies will focus on biological markers for response and resistance. Endocrine therapy of breast cancer has been improved co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology 2012-09, Vol.131 (3-5), p.93-100 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | ► Presurgical endocrine treatment (PSET) is a good clinical research model. ► PSET may predict response/outcome of breast cancer patients with some limitations. ► Future PSET-studies will focus on biological markers for response and resistance.
Endocrine therapy of breast cancer has been improved continuously during the last decades. Currently, aromatase inhibitors are dominating treatment algorithms for postmenopausal women with hormone-receptor positive breast cancer while tamoxifen still is the most widely used drug for premenopausal women. Several research tools and study designs have been used to challenge established drugs and develop the field of antihormonal therapy. One pivotal study option has been the observation of clinical responses during presurgical/neoadjuvant endocrine therapy (PSET/NET). This strategy has several major advantages. First, the breast tumor, still present in the patient's breast during therapy, can be followed by clinical observations and radiological measurements and any treatment effect will be immediately registered. Second, tumor biopsies may be obtained before initiation and following therapy allowing intra-patient comparisons. These tumor-biopsies may be used for the evaluation of intra-tumor changes associated with drug treatment. As examples, presurgical breast cancer trials have been used to evaluate intra-tumor estrogen levels during therapy with aromatase inhibitors and also to study mechanisms involved in the adaptation processes to estrogen suppression. Biomarker studies have provided information that may be used for patient selection in the future. Finally, recently published results from presurgical trials testing combinations of classical endocrine drugs and novel targeted therapies have produced promising results. |
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ISSN: | 0960-0760 1879-1220 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2011.12.006 |