
New Service for
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon
Drug could effectively treat, prevent the
spread of Breast Cancer
Newswise — A Mayo Clinic study of a drug
that has shown promise in treating sarcoma,
lung and brain cancers, demonstrates that
the drug may also be effective in treating
breast cancer, in particular the spread of
breast cancer.
The study, which was done in mouse models,
is featured on the cover of the November
issue of Cancer Research.
The National Cancer Institute reports that
of 240,510 breast cancer diagnoses each
year, about 178,480 of those women will have
invasive cancer that has spread. In breast
cancer, the cancer commonly lodges in the
bone, destroying it in a debilitating and
painful process called osteolysis.
Osteolysis can lead to bone fractures that
release excess calcium into the blood
causing patients to feel tired or even lose
consciousness.
2-methoxyestradiol (meth-oxy-es-tra-di-ol),
or 2ME2, (trade name Panzem), is currently
in clinical trials by other researchers as a
treatment for various cancers. Mayo Clinic
recently completed a clinical trial of oral
2ME2 in multiple myeloma.
2ME2 is derived from estrogen and works by
suppressing tumor growth and blocking the
formation of new blood vessels that feed
tumors.
“2ME2 could benefit patients because this
single drug essentially combines the effects
of chemotherapy (which destroys cancer
cells) and antiangiogenesis drugs (which
destroy blood vessels that feed tumors),”
states Muzaffer Cicek, Ph.D., a Mayo Clinic
cell biologist in endocrine research and the
corresponding author of the study.
A key part of the study is in 2ME2's ability
to induce cancer cells to self-destruct, a
process called apoptosis. Cells have the
ability to self-destruct when damaged or
infected with a virus, for example. But if a
damaged cell is unable to self-destruct, it
can develop into a tumor. Other studies of
2ME2 tested in other cancers, show that 2ME2
could induce cancer cells to self-destruct.
Dr. Cicek and colleagues conducted
experiments in mouse models to determine
whether 2ME2 would be an effective drug
against breast cancer. The results are
promising. Researchers described 2ME2 as an
“attractive candidate for controlling tumor
growth, metastasis to bone and bone
disorders,” such as osteolysis caused by the
spread of breast cancer to bone. Based on
the study findings, the researchers propose
that 2ME2 be used as a therapeutic agent to
target primary tumors, metastasis to bone
and tumor-induced osteolysis.
There are few effective treatments for
advanced breast cancer, but in this case,
the study authors feel that 2ME2 has the
potential to improve the prognosis of
patients with advanced breast cancer.
“Targeting metastatic tumors at sites of
metastasis would be of great benefit for
patients who have advanced cancer.
Destroying tumors in bone and also slowing
the development of osteolytic lesions would
be desirable therapies and greatly improve
the prognosis of patients who have bone
metastasis,” the authors state.
In summary, Mayo Clinic researchers found
that 2ME2 could:
* effectively target breast cancer cells
* prevent the spread of breast cancer cells
to bone
* protect bone from osteolysis, which is a
type of bone metastasis in which the bone is
eaten away by cancer cells.
Although clinical trials of 2ME2 for breast
cancer patients have not taken place, other
clinical studies of 2ME2 have been
conducted. These trials are based on an oral
version of 2ME2 to treat primary tumors, but
this method has its limitations, as the oral
version of 2ME2 is poorly suited to getting
into the blood system and reaching tumors.
The new Mayo Clinic study resolves this by
delivering 2ME2 by injection and in a lower
dose -- eight times lower than the
comparable oral version used in mouse
models.
“We found a complete reduction of tumors in
the soft tissue (mammary fat glands) and in
tumors in the bone. It targeted and blocked
the metastasis from soft tissue to the
bone,” says Merry Jo Oursler, Ph.D., a Mayo
Clinic cell biologist in endocrine research
and the senior author of the study.
The researchers caution that although the
study’s findings are promising, they need to
be replicated and tested in clinical trials.
“Our data support the conclusion that 2ME2
could be an important new therapy in the
arsenal to fight metastatic breast cancer,”
the researchers write.
The study is funded by a grant from the
National Institutes of Health and the Mayo
Clinic.
The study’s authors also include: Urszula
Iwaniec, Ph.D., and Russell Turner, Ph.D.,
of Oregon State University; Michael
Goblirsch and Denis Clohisy, of the
University of University of Minnesota Cancer
Center; and Anne Vrabel and Ming Ruan, of
Mayo Clinic.
...
...
...