Tamoxifen
|
|
Systematic (IUPAC) name |
(Z)-2-[4-(1,2-diphenylbut-1-enyl)phenoxy]-N,N-dimethylethanamine |
Clinical data |
Trade names |
Nolvadex, Istubal, Valodex |
AHFS/Drugs.com |
monograph |
MedlinePlus |
a682414 |
Pregnancy cat. |
B3 (AU) D (US) |
Legal status |
Prescription Only (S4) (AU) ℞-only (CA) POM (UK) ℞-only (US) |
Routes |
Oral |
Pharmacokinetic data |
Protein binding |
99% |
Metabolism |
Hepatic (CYP3A4, 2C9 and 2D6) |
Half-life |
7-14 hours |
Excretion |
Faeces (65%), urine (9%) |
Identifiers |
CAS number |
10540-29-1 Y |
ATC code |
L02BA01 |
PubChem |
CID 2733526 |
IUPHAR ligand |
1016 |
DrugBank |
DB00675 |
ChemSpider |
2015313 Y |
UNII |
094ZI81Y45 Y |
KEGG |
D08559 Y |
ChEBI |
CHEBI:41774 Y |
ChEMBL |
CHEMBL83 Y |
Chemical data |
Formula |
C26H29NO |
Mol. mass |
371.515 g/mol
563.638 g/mol (citrate salt) |
SMILES
- O(c1ccc(cc1)/C(c2ccccc2)=C(\c3ccccc3)CC)CCN(C)C
|
InChI
-
InChI=1S/C26H29NO/c1-4-25(21-11-7-5-8-12-21)26(22-13-9-6-10-14-22)23-15-17-24(18-16-23)28-20-19-27(2)3/h5-18H,4,19-20H2,1-3H3/b26-25- Y
Key:NKANXQFJJICGDU-QPLCGJKRSA-N Y
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Y (what is this?) (verify) |
Tamoxifen is an antagonist of the estrogen receptor in breast tissue via its active metabolite, hydroxytamoxifen. In other tissues such as the endometrium, it behaves as an agonist, and thus may be characterized as a mixed agonist/antagonist. Tamoxifen is the usual endocrine (anti-estrogen) therapy for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer in pre-menopausal women, and is also a standard in post-menopausal women although aromatase inhibitors are also frequently used in that setting.[1]
Some breast cancer cells require estrogen to grow. Estrogen binds to and activates the estrogen receptor in these cells. Tamoxifen is metabolized into compounds that also bind to the estrogen receptor but do not activate it. Because of this competitive antagonism, tamoxifen acts like a key broken off in the lock that prevents any other key from being inserted, preventing estrogen from binding to its receptor. Hence breast cancer cell growth is blocked.
Tamoxifen was discovered by pharmaceutical company Imperial Chemical Industries[2] (now AstraZeneca) and is sold under the trade names Nolvadex, Istubal, and Valodex. However, the drug, even before its patent expiration, was and still is widely referred to by its generic name "tamoxifen."
Contents
- 1 Medical uses
- 2 Other uses
- 2.1 McCune-Albright syndrome
- 2.2 Infertility
- 2.3 Gynecomastia
- 2.4 Bipolar disorder
- 2.5 Angiogenesis and cancer
- 2.6 Control of gene expression
- 2.7 Riedel's thyroiditis
- 3 Mechanism of action
- 4 Side effects
- 4.1 Bone
- 4.2 Endometrial cancer
- 4.3 Cardiovascular and metabolic
- 4.4 Central nervous system
- 4.5 Premature growth plate fusion
- 5 Pharmacogenetics and drug interactions
- 6 Market
- 7 Discovery
- 8 See also
- 9 References
- 10 External links
Medical uses[edit]
Breast cancer[edit]
Tamoxifen is currently used for the treatment of both early and advanced ER+ (estrogen receptor positive) breast cancer in pre- and post-menopausal women.[3] Additionally, it is the most common hormone treatment for male breast cancer.[4] It is also approved by the FDA for the prevention of breast cancer in women at high risk of developing the disease.[5] It has been further approved for the reduction of contralateral (in the opposite breast) cancer.
In 2006, the large STAR clinical study concluded that raloxifene is equally effective in reducing the incidence of breast cancer, but after an average 4-year follow-up there were 36% fewer uterine cancers and 29% fewer blood clots in women taking raloxifene than in women taking tamoxifen, although the difference is not statistically significant.[6][7][8]
In 2005, the ATAC trial showed that after average 68 months following a 5 year adjuvant treatment, the group that received anastrozole (Arimidex) had significantly better results than the tamoxifen group in measures like disease free survival, but no overall mortality benefit.[9] Data from the trial suggest that anastrozole should be the preferred medication for postmenopausal women with localized breast cancer that is estrogen receptor (ER) positive.[10] Another study found that the risk of recurrence was reduced 40% (with some risk of bone fracture) and that ER negative patients also benefited from switching to anastrozole.[11][12]
Other uses[edit]
McCune-Albright syndrome[edit]
In McCune-Albright syndrome (MAS) tamoxifen has been used to treat premature puberty and the consequences of premature puberty. Tamoxifen has been seen to decrease rapid bone maturation which is the result of excessive estrogen and alter predicted adult height (PAH).[13][14][15] The same effects have also been seen in short pubertal boys.[16]
However, one in vitro study in 2007 and later an in vivo study in 2008 have shown that tamoxifen induces apoptosis in growth plate chondrocytes, reduces serum IGF-I levels and causes persistent retardation of longitudinal and cortical radial bone growth in young male rats, leading the researches to express concern giving tamoxifen to growing individuals.[17][18]
Infertility[edit]
Tamoxifen is used to treat infertility in women with anovulatory disorders. A dose of 10–40 mg per day is administered in days 3–7 of a woman's cycle.[19] In addition, a rare condition occasionally treated with tamoxifen is retroperitoneal fibrosis.[20]
Gynecomastia[edit]
Tamoxifen is used to prevent estrogen related gynecomastia, resulting from elevated estrogenic levels. It is taken as a preventative measure in small doses, or used at the onset of any symptoms e.g. nipple soreness/sensitivity. Other drugs are taken for the similar purposes such as clomiphene citrate and the anti-aromatase drugs which are used in order to try to avoid the hormone related adverse effects. Tamoxifen is also sometimes used to treat or prevent gynecomastia in sex offenders undergoing temporary chemical castration.[21]
Bipolar disorder[edit]
Tamoxifen has been shown to be effective in the treatment of mania in patients with bipolar disorder by blocking protein kinase C (PKC), an enzyme that regulates neuron activity in the brain. Researchers believe PKC is over-active during the mania in bipolar patients.[22][23]
Angiogenesis and cancer[edit]
Tamoxifen is one of three drugs in an anti-angiogenetic protocol developed by Dr. Judah Folkman, a researcher at Children's Hospital at Harvard Medical School in Boston. Folkman discovered in the 1970s that angiogenesis – the growth of new blood vessels – plays a significant role in the development of cancer. Since his discovery, an entirely new field of cancer research has developed. Clinical trials on angiogenesis inhibitors have been underway since 1992 using myriad different drugs. The Harvard researchers developed a specific protocol for a golden retriever named Navy who was cancer-free after receiving the prescribed cocktail of celecoxib, doxycycline, and tamoxifen – the treatment subsequently became known as the Navy Protocol.[24] Furthermore tamoxifen treatment alone has been shown to have anti-angiogenetic effects in animal models of cancer which appear to be, at least in part, independent of tamoxifen's estrogen receptor antagonist properties.[25]
Control of gene expression[edit]
Tamoxifen is used as a research tool to trigger tissue-specific gene expression in many conditional expression constructs in genetically modified animals including a version of the Cre-Lox recombination technique.[26]
Riedel's thyroiditis[edit]
Tamoxifen has been proposed as part of a treatment plan for Riedel's thyroiditis.[27]
Mechanism of action[edit]
Crystallographic structure of 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen (carbon = white, oxygen = red, nitrogen = blue) complexed with ligand binding domain of estrogen receptor alpha (cyan ribbon).
[28]
Tamoxifen competitively binds to estrogen receptors in tumor cells and other tissue targets, producing a nuclear complex that decreases DNA synthesis and inhibits estrogen effects. It is a nonsteroidal agent with potent antiestrogenic properties which compete with estrogen for binding sites in breast and other tissues. Tamoxifen causes cells to remain in the G0 and G1 phases of the cell cycle. Because it prevents (pre)cancerous cells from dividing but does not cause cell death, tamoxifen is cytostatic rather than cytocidal.
Tamoxifen itself is a prodrug, having relatively little affinity for its target protein, the estrogen receptor. It is metabolized in the liver by the cytochrome P450 isoform CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 into active metabolites such as 4-hydroxytamoxifen (afimoxifene) and N-desmethyl-4-hydroxytamoxifen (endoxifen)[29] which have 30-100 times more affinity with the estrogen receptor than tamoxifen itself. These active metabolites compete with estrogen in the body for binding to the estrogen receptor. In breast tissue, 4-hydroxytamoxifen acts as an estrogen receptor antagonist so that transcription of estrogen-responsive genes is inhibited.[30]
Tamoxifen binds to estrogen receptor (ER) which in turn interacts with DNA. The ER/tamoxifen complex recruits other proteins known as co-repressors to stop genes being switched on by estrogen. Some of these proteins include NCoR and SMRT.[31] Tamoxifen function can be regulated by a number of different variables including growth factors.[32] Tamoxifen needs to block growth factor proteins such as ErbB2/HER2[33] because high levels of ErbB2 have been shown to occur in tamoxifen resistant cancers.[34] Tamoxifen seems to require a protein PAX2 for its full anticancer effect.[33][35] In the presence of high PAX2 expression, the tamoxifen/estrogen receptor complex is able to suppress the expression of the pro-proliferative ERBB2 protein. In contrast, when AIB-1 expression is higher than PAX2, tamoxifen/estrogen receptor complex upregulates the expression of ERBB2 resulting in stimulation of breast cancer growth.[33][36]
Side effects[edit]
A report in September 2009 from Health and Human Services' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality suggests that tamoxifen, raloxifene, and tibolone used to treat breast cancer significantly reduce invasive breast cancer in midlife and older women, but also increase the risk of adverse side effects.[37]
Bone[edit]
A beneficial side effect of tamoxifen is that it prevents bone loss by acting as an estrogen receptor agonist (i.e., mimicking the effects of estrogen) in this cell type. Therefore, by inhibiting osteoclasts, it prevents osteoporosis.[38][39] When tamoxifen was launched as a drug, it was thought that tamoxifen would act as an estrogen receptor antagonist in all tissue, including bone, and therefore it was feared that it would contribute to osteoporosis. It was therefore very surprising that the opposite effect was observed clinically. Hence tamoxifen's tissue selective action directly led to the formulation of the concept of selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs).[40] In contrast tamoxifen appears to be associated with bone loss in premenopausal women who continue to menstruate after adjuvant chemotherapy.[41]
Endometrial cancer[edit]
Tamoxifen is a selective estrogen receptor modulator.[42] Even though it is an antagonist in breast tissue it acts as partial agonist on the endometrium and has been linked to endometrial cancer in some women. Therefore endometrial changes, including cancer, are among tamoxifen's side effects.[43] With time, risk of endometrial cancer may be doubled to quadrupled, which is a reason tamoxifen is typically only used for 5 years.[44]
The American Cancer Society lists tamoxifen as a known carcinogen, stating that it increases the risk of some types of uterine cancer while lowering the risk of breast cancer recurrence.[45] The ACS states that its use should not be avoided in cases where the risk of breast cancer recurrence without the drug is higher than the risk of developing uterine cancer with the drug.
Cardiovascular and metabolic[edit]
Tamoxifen treatment of postmenopausal women is associated with beneficial effects on serum lipid profiles. However, long-term data from clinical trials have failed to demonstrate a cardioprotective effect.[46] For some women, tamoxifen can cause a rapid increase in triglyceride concentration in the blood.[citation needed] In addition there is an increased risk of thromboembolism especially during and immediately after major surgery or periods of immobility.[47] Tamoxifen is also a cause of fatty liver, otherwise known as steatorrhoeic hepatosis or steatosis hepatis.[48]
Central nervous system[edit]
Tamoxifen-treated breast cancer patients show evidence of reduced cognition,[49] a major side effect of tamoxifen, and semantic memory scores.[50] However memory impairment in patients treated with tamoxifen was less severe compared with those treated with anastrozole (an aromatase inhibitor).[51]
A significant number of tamoxifen treated breast cancer patients experience a reduction of libido.[52][53]
Premature growth plate fusion[edit]
While tamoxifen has been shown to antagonize the actions of estrogen in tissues such as the breast, its effects in other tissues such as bones has not been documented fully. There have been studies done in mice showing tamoxifen mimic the effects of estrogen on bone metabolism and skeletal growth. Thus increasing the possibility of pre-mature bone fusion. This effect would be less of a concern in adults who have stopped growing.[54]
Pharmacogenetics and drug interactions[edit]
Nolvadex (tamoxifen) 20 mg tablets
Patients with variant forms of the gene CYP2D6 (also called simply 2D6) may not receive full benefit from tamoxifen because of too slow metabolism of the tamoxifen prodrug into its active metabolite 4-hydroxytamoxifen.[55][56] On Oct 18, 2006 the Subcommittee for Clinical Pharmacology recommended relabeling tamoxifen to include information about this gene in the package insert.[57]
Certain CYP2D6 variations in breast cancer patients leads to a worse clinical outcome for tamoxifen treatment.[58] Genotyping therefore has the potential for identification of women who have these CYP2D6 phenotypes and for whom the use of tamoxifen is associated with poor outcomes.
Recent studies suggest that taking the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) antidepressants; paroxetine (Paxil), fluoxetine (Prozac), and sertraline (Zoloft), can decrease the effectiveness of tamoxifen, as these drugs compete for the CYP2D6 enzyme which is needed to metabolize tamoxifen into the active form; endoxifen.[59] A U.S study presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting in 2009 found that after two years, 7.5 percent of women who took only tamoxifen had a recurrence, compared with 16 percent who took either paroxetine, fluoxetine or sertraline; drugs considered to be the most potent CYP2D6 inhibitors. That difference translates to a 120 percent increase in the risk of breast cancer recurrence. Patients taking the SSRIs; Celexa (citalopram), Lexapro (escitalopram), and Luvox (fluvoxamine), did not have an increased risk of recurrence, due to their lack of competitive metabolism for the CYP2D6 enzyme.[60] A newer study demonstrated a clearer and stronger effect from paroxetine in causing the worst outcomes. Patients treated with both paroxetine and tamoxifen have a 67% increased risk of death from breast cancer, from 24% to 91%, depending on the duration of coadministration.[61]
Recent research has shown that 7-10% of women with breast cancer may not receive the full medical benefit from taking tamoxifen due to their unique genetic make-up. DNA Drug Safety Testing can examine DNA variations in the CYP2D6 and other important drug processing pathways. More than 20% of all clinically used medications are metabolized by CYP2D6 and knowing the CYP2D6 status of a person can help the doctor with the future selection of medications.[62] Other molecular biomarkers may also be used to select appropriate patients likely to benefit from tamoxifen.[63]
Market[edit]
Global sales of tamoxifen in 2001 were $1,024 million.[64] Since the expiration of the patent in 2002, it is now widely available as a generic drug around the world. Barr Labs Inc had challenged the patent (which in 1992 was ruled unenforcable) but later came to an agreement with Zeneca to licence the patent and sell tamoxifen at close to Zeneca's price.[65] As of 2004, tamoxifen was the world's largest selling hormonal drug for the treatment of breast cancer.[66]
In the US, 20 mg tamoxifen tablets cost under $20 per month in quantity.[67] In the UK, the NHS pays £1.90 a month (patients receive them either free or for the standard prescription charge of £7.65 in England, £3 in Northern Ireland[68] and free in Wales and Scotland [69]). In Estonia tamoxifen costs less than $2 for 30 tablets of 20 mg when used for treatment of a neoplasm or lymphangioma.[70] Other countries report similar prices.[citation needed]
Discovery[edit]
In the late 1950s, pharmaceutical companies were actively researching a newly discovered class of anti-estrogen compounds in the hope of developing a morning-after contraceptive pill. Arthur L Walpole was a reproductive endocrinologist who led such a team at the Alderley Park research laboratories of ICI Pharmaceuticals. It was there in 1966 that Dora Richardson first synthesised tamoxifen, known then as ICI-46,474.[71] Walpole and his colleagues filed a UK patent covering this compound in 1962, but patent protection on this compound was repeatedly denied in the US until the 1980s.[72] Tamoxifen did eventually receive marketing approval as a fertility treatment, but the class of compounds never proved useful in human contraception. A link between estrogen and breast cancer had been known for many years, but cancer treatments were not a corporate priority at the time, and Walpole's personal interests were important in keeping support for the compound alive in the face of this and the lack of patent protection.[2]
The first clinical study took place at the Christie Hospital in 1971, and showed a convincing effect in advanced breast cancer,[73] but nevertheless ICI's development programme came close to termination when it was reviewed in 1972. Tamoxifen's further development may have been bolstered by a second clinical study by Harold W.C. Ward [74] at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham. Ward's study showed a more definitive response to the drug at a higher dosage. It appears to have been Walpole again who convinced the company to market tamoxifen for late stage breast cancer in 1973.[72] He was also instrumental in funding V. Craig Jordan to work on tamoxifen. In 1972, ICI Pharmaceuticals Division abandoned development of tamoxifen for financial reasons. The drug was subsequently reinvented from a failed contraceptive, to become tamoxifen, the gold standard for the adjuvant treatment of breast cancer and the pioneering medicine for chemprevention for high risk women.[75] Two books, Estrogen Action, Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators and Women's Health (Imperial College Press 2013) and Tamoxifen Pioneering Medicine in Breast Cancer (Springer 2013) tell this story.
1980 saw the publication of the first trial to show that tamoxifen given in addition to chemotherapy improved survival for patients with early breast cancer.[76] In advanced disease, tamoxifen is now only recognised as effective in estrogen receptor positive (ER+) patients, but the early trials did not select ER+ patients, and by the mid 1980s the clinical trial picture was not showing a major advantage for tamoxifen.[77] Nevertheless, tamoxifen had a relatively mild side-effect profile, and a number of large trials continued.
The pharmacology of SERMs was discovered, defined, and deciphered during the 1980s [78] A clinical strategy was described [79] that led to the creation of SERMs as a group of multifunctional medicines aimed at the treatment or prevention of many conditions in postmenopausal women, eg: osteoporosis and breast cancer. This story is told in: V. Craig Jordan, ed. 2013. "Estrogen Action, Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators and Women's Health" Imperial College Press, Singapore.
It was not until 1998 that the meta-analysis of the Oxford based Early Breast Cancer Trialists' Collaborative Group showed definitively that tamoxifen saved lives in early breast cancer.[80]
See also[edit]
- Afimoxifene, a skin gel of an active metabolite of tamoxifen
References[edit]
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- ^ Decensi A, Maisonneuve P, Rotmensz N, Bettega D, Costa A, Sacchini V, Salvioni A, Travaglini R, Oliviero P, D'Aiuto G, Gulisano M, Gucciardo G, del Turco MR, Pizzichetta MA, Conforti S, Bonanni B, Boyle P, Veronesi U (2005). "Effect of tamoxifen on venous thromboembolic events in a breast cancer prevention trial". Circulation 111 (5): 650–6. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.0000154545.84124.AC . PMID 15699284.
- ^ Khalid A Osman; Meissa M Osman; Mohamed H Ahmed (2007). "Tamoxifen-induced non-alcoholic steatohepatitis: where are we now and where are we going?". Expert opinion on drug safety 6 (1): 1–4. doi:10.1517/14740338.6.1.1 . PMID 17181445.
- ^ Paganini-Hill A, Clark LJ (November 2000). "Preliminary assessment of cognitive function in breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen". Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 64 (2): 165–76. doi:10.1023/A:1006426132338 . PMID 11194452.
- ^ Eberling JL, Wu C, Tong-Turnbeaugh R, Jagust WJ (January 2004). "Estrogen- and tamoxifen-associated effects on brain structure and function". NeuroImage 21 (1): 364–71. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.08.037 . PMID 14741674.
- ^ Bender CM, Sereika SM, Brufsky AM, Ryan CM, Vogel VG, Rastogi P, Cohen SM, Casillo FE, Berga SL (2007). "Memory impairments with adjuvant anastrozole versus tamoxifen in women with early-stage breast cancer". Menopause 14 (6): 995–8. doi:10.1097/gme.0b013e318148b28b . PMC 2831410. PMID 17898668.
- ^ Mortimer JE, Boucher L, Baty J, Knapp DL, Ryan E, Rowland JH (1999). "Effect of tamoxifen on sexual functioning in patients with breast cancer" (abstract). J. Clin. Oncol. 17 (5): 1488–92. PMID 10334535.
- ^ Cella D, Fallowfield L, Barker P, Cuzick J, Locker G, Howell A (2006). "Quality of life of post-menopausal women in the ATAC ("Arimidex", tamoxifen, alone or in combination) trial after completion of 5 years' adjuvant treatment for early breast cancer". Breast Cancer Res. Treat. 100 (3): 273–84. doi:10.1007/s10549-006-9260-6 . PMID 16944295.
- ^ Karimian E, Chagin AS, Gjerde J, Heino T, Lien EA, Ohlsson C, Sävendahl L (August 2008). "Tamoxifen impairs both longitudinal and cortical bone growth in young male rats". J. Bone Miner. Res. 23 (8): 1267–77. doi:10.1359/jbmr.080319 . PMID 18348701.
- ^ Goetz MP, Rae JM, Suman VJ, Safgren SL, Ames MM, Visscher DW, Reynolds C, Couch FJ, Lingle WL, Flockhart DA, Desta Z, Perez EA, Ingle JN (2005). "Pharmacogenetics of tamoxifen biotransformation is associated with clinical outcomes of efficacy and hot flashes". J Clin Oncol 23 (36): 9312–8. doi:10.1200/JCO.2005.03.3266 . PMID 16361630.
- ^ Beverage JN, Sissung TM, Sion AM, Danesi R, Figg WD (2007). "CYP2D6 polymorphisms and the impact on tamoxifen therapy". J Pharm Sci 96 (9): Epub ahead of print. doi:10.1002/jps.20892 . PMID 17518364.
- ^ Information about CYP2D6 and tamoxifen from DNADirect's website
- ^ Schroth W, Goetz MP, Hamann U, Fasching PA, Schmidt M, Winter S, Fritz P, Simon W, Suman VJ, Ames MM, Safgren SL, Kuffel MJ, Ulmer HU, Boländer J, Strick R, Beckmann MW, Koelbl H, Weinshilboum RM, Ingle JN, Eichelbaum M, Schwab M, Brauch H (October 2009). "Association between CYP2D6 polymorphisms and outcomes among women with early stage breast cancer treated with tamoxifen". JAMA 302 (13): 1429–36. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.1420 . PMID 19809024.
- ^ Jin Y, Desta Z, Stearns V, Ward B, Ho H, Lee KH, Skaar T, Storniolo AM, Li L, Araba A, Blanchard R, Nguyen A, Ullmer L, Hayden J, Lemler S, Weinshilboum RM, Rae JM, Hayes DF, Flockhart DA (2005). "CYP2D6 genotype, antidepressant use, and tamoxifen metabolism during adjuvant breast cancer treatment". J Natl Cancer Inst 97 (1): 30–9. doi:10.1093/jnci/dji005 . PMID 15632378.
- ^ Staff Reports (Summer 2009). "ASCO Updates: Antidepressants Reduce the Effectiveness of Tamoxifen.". CURE (Cancer Updates, Research and Education).
- ^ BMJ 2010;340:c693
- ^ Information about Tamoxitest and how DNA testing can help in the selection of the best treatment methodology from Genelex's website
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- ^ Cole MP, Jones CT, Todd ID (1971). "A new anti-estrogenic agent in late breast cancer. An early clinical appraisal of ICI46474". Br. J. Cancer 25 (2): 270–5. doi:10.1038/bjc.1971.33 . PMC 2008453. PMID 5115829.
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External links[edit]
- Tamoxifen on OpenWetWare, a life scientist wiki
Estrogenics
|
|
Receptor |
ER (α, β)
|
|
|
GPER
|
- Agonists: Estradiol
- Fulvestrant
- G-1
- Genistein
- Quercetin
- Tamoxifen
|
|
|
Enzyme
(inhibitors) |
20,22-Desmolase
|
- 22-ABC
- 3,3′-Dimethoxybenzidine
- 3-Methoxybenzidine
- Aminoglutethimide
- Cyanoketone
- Danazol
- Etomidate
- Mitotane
- Trilostane
|
|
17α-Hydroxylase,
17,20-Lyase
|
- 22-ABC
- 22-Oxime
- Abiraterone
- Bifonazole
- Clotrimazole
- Cyanoketone
- Cyproterone
- Danazol
- Econazole
- Galeterone
- Gestrinone
- Isoconazole
- Ketoconazole
- L-39
- Liarozole
- LY-207,320
- MDL-27,302
- Miconazole
- Mifepristone
- Orteronel
- Pioglitazone
- Rosiglitazone
- Spironolactone
- Stanozolol
- SU-10,603
- TGF-β
- Tioconazole
- Troglitazone
- VN/87-1
- YM116
|
|
3β-HSD
|
- 4-MA
- Azastene
- Cyanoketone
- Danazol
- Epostane
- Genistein
- Gestrinone
- Metyrapone
- Oxymetholone
- Pioglitazone
- Rosiglitazone
- Trilostane
- Troglitazone
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|
17β-HSD
|
|
|
Aromatase
|
- 1,4,6-Androstatriene-3,17-dione
- 4-Androstene-3,6,17-trione
- 4-Cyclohexylaniline
- 4-Hydroxytestosterone
- 5α-DHNET
- Abyssinone II
- Aminoglutethimide
- Anastrozole
- Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C)
- Atamestane
- Bifonazole
- CGP-45,688
- CGS-47,645
- Clotrimazole
- DHT
- Difeconazole
- Econazole
- Exemestane
- Fadrozole
- Fenarimol
- Finrozole
- Formestane
- Imazalil
- Isoconazole
- Ketoconazole
- Letrozole
- Liarozole
- MEN-11066
- Miconazole
- Minamestane
- Nimorazole
- NKS01
- ORG-33,201
- Penconazole
- Plomestane
- Prochloraz
- Propioconazole
- Pyridoglutethimide
- Rogletimide
- Rotenone
- Talarozole
- Testolactone
- Tioconazole
- Triadimefon
- Triadimenol
- Troglitazone
- Vorozole
- YM511
- Zinc
Note: 5α-reductase and 21-hydroxylase inhibitors may also affect estrogen levels as they prevent metabolism of estrogen steroid precursors.
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Other |
Endogenous
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- Estrogens: 5α-Androstane-3β,17β-diol
- DHEA
- Estetrol
- Estradiol
- Estriol
- Estrone
- Antiestrogens: 2-Hydroxyestrone
- 16-Hydroxyestrone
- Precursors: Cholesterol
- 22R-Hydroxycholesterol
- 20α,22R-Dihydroxycholesterol
- Pregnenolone
- 17-Hydroxypregnenolone
- Progesterone
- 17-Hydroxyprogesterone
- Cortodoxone/Deoxycortisol
- DHEA
- DHEA sulfate
- 16-Hydroxy-DHEA
- 16-Hydroxy-DHEA sulfate
- Androstenediol
- Androstenedione
- 16-Hydroxyandrostenedione
- Testosterone
|
|
Indirect
|
- Androgens/Antiandrogens (see here)
- Calcitriol (a form of Vitamin D)
- GnRH agonists/antagonists (see here)
- Gonadotropins//Antigonadotropins (see here)
- Plasma proteins (SHBG, ABP, Albumin)
- Progestogens/Antiprogestins (see here)
- Prolactin
|
|
Procedures
|
- Adrenalectomy
- Hypophysectomy
- Oophorectomy
- Orchiectomy
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|
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AstraZeneca
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Products |
- Anastrozole
- Atenolol
- Brompheniramine
- Budesonide
- Disufenton sodium
- Esomeprazole
- FluMist
- Gefitinib
- Goserelin
- Isosorbide mononitrate
- Motavizumab
- Omeprazole
- Palivizumab
- Propofol
- Rosuvastatin
- Tamoxifen
- Ticagrelor
- Vandetanib
- Ximelagatran
- Zafirlukast
- Zolmitriptan
|
|
Predecessors and
acquired companies |
- Astra AB
- Cambridge Antibody Technology
- MedImmune
- Zeneca
|
|
People |
- Tom McKillop
- Louis Schweitzer
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Category
|
|