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Hormone-sensitive cancer

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(Redirected from Hormone-dependent neoplasms)

A hormone-sensitive cancer, or hormone-dependent cancer, is a type of cancer that is dependent on a hormone for growth and/or survival. Examples include breast cancer, which is dependent on estrogens like estradiol, and prostate cancer, which is dependent on androgens like testosterone.

Hormones play important roles in our body, they're also effective in some types of cancer by promoting some tumors grow and spread, which are so-called hormone-sensitive or hormone-dependent cancer. A hormone-sensitive cancer, or hormone-dependent cancer, is a type of cancer that is dependent on a hormone for growth and/or survival. If a tumor is hormone-sensitive, it means that there are special proteins called receptors on cells surface. When the hormone bind the matched receptor, it results in growth and spread of cancer cells.

Mechanism of carcinogenesis

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While tumor initiating event for hormone-related cancers can be varied, the promotion event and subsequent proliferation is driven by a sex hormone. Both endogenous and exogenous hormones, by driving cell proliferation, increased the number of cell divisions and the opportunity for random genetic errors to lead to cancer.[1]

Hormone-sensitive cancer types

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The main types of Hormone-sensitive cancers are the following.[2]

Breast cancer

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Breast cancer is often hormone responsive, since growth or regression of tumors can often be regulated by appropriate endocrine manipulations.[3] Estrogen and progesterone seem to be main hormones involved in growth of breast cancer.[3]

Ovarian cancer

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Ovarian cancer can be affected by estrogen. β-estradiol (E2) can stimulate the growth of some estrogen receptor(ER)-positive ovarian carcinoma cells, and these effects may be related with changes in the cellular levels of steroid hormone receptors.[4]

Uterine cancer

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Uterine or endometrial cancer are activated by estrogen and progesterone are related to this type. The uterine endometrium is extraordinary sensitive to steroid hormones, observation that women who ovulate and produce progesterone have an extremely low possibility to get endometrial cancer proves progesterone as a critical inhibitor of carcinogenesis.[5]

Prostate cancer

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Prostate cancer is dependent on androgens like testosterone and similar hormones that can help it grow and spread.

Treatment

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Treatments for hormone-sensitive-cancers include blocking the synthesis or action of the hormone or surgery to remove the organ that produces the hormone.[2] Androgen deprivation therapy includes treatment with androgen receptor antagonists and/or surgical removal of the testes while estrogen deprivation therapy involves treatment with estrogen receptor antagonists and/or surgical removal of the ovaries.

Receptor antagonists

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Antiandrogens or antiestrogen are used to block the binding of androgen and estrogen to their respective nuclear hormone receptors and thereby blocks the proliferative effects of these hormone on hormone dependent cancer.

For example, the antiestrogen tamoxifen used for the treatment of breast cancer[6] while the antiandrogen bicalutamide alone[7] or in combination with castration[8] is used to treat prostate cancer.

Interruption of hormonal stimulus. For example, tamoxifen can slow the progression until actual hormone independence occurs in the pathway later. In more recent years, evidence in support of this cell proliferation model of hormone responsive cancer etiology has continued to accumulate. Anti-hormone therapies are proved to be effective in stopping progression and thereby increasing the time to recurrence or death.[9]

Receptor agonists

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Progesterone is regarded as the major endometrial tumor suppressor,[5]

Synthesis inhibitors

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Various agents that block key events in the synthesis of hormones are sometimes used to treat hormone dependent cancers. Aromatase inhibitors such as anastrozole block the synthesis of estrogen while CYP17A1 inhibitors such as abiraterone block the synthesis of androgen. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonists blocks the signaling that stimulates androgen synthesis.

Surgery

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As the growth of hormone dependent cancer is driven by sex hormones, surgical removal of the organs that synthesizes the sex hormone is sometimes performed. In the case of prostate cancer, orchiectomy (surgical castration) of the testes is sometimes performed while oophorectomy (surgical removal of the ovaries) is sometimes performed to prevent breast cancer in high risk women with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.

References

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  1. ^ Henderson BE, Feigelson HS (March 2000). "Hormonal carcinogenesis". Carcinogenesis. 21 (3): 427–33. doi:10.1093/carcin/21.3.427. PMID 10688862.
  2. ^ a b "Hormone-sensitive cancer types". WebMD.
  3. ^ a b McGuire WL, Horwitz KB, Pearson OH, Segaloff A (June 1977). "Current status of estrogen and progesterone receptors in breast cancer". Cancer. 39 (6 Suppl): 2934–47. doi:10.1002/1097-0142(197706)39:6<2934::aid-cncr2820390680>3.0.co;2-p. PMID 326386.
  4. ^ Langdon SP, Hirst GL, Miller EP, Hawkins RA, Tesdale AL, Smyth JF, Miller WR (August 1994). "The regulation of growth and protein expression by estrogen in vitro: a study of 8 human ovarian carcinoma cell lines". The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. 50 (3–4): 131–5. doi:10.1016/0960-0760(94)90019-1. PMID 8049141. S2CID 21166228.
  5. ^ a b Yang S, Thiel KW, Leslie KK (April 2011). "Progesterone: the ultimate endometrial tumor suppressor". Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism. 22 (4): 145–52. doi:10.1016/j.tem.2011.01.005. PMC 4062362. PMID 21353793.
  6. ^ Rutqvist LE, Johansson H, Signomklao T, Johansson U, Fornander T, Wilking N (May 1995). "Adjuvant tamoxifen therapy for early stage breast cancer and second primary malignancies. Stockholm Breast Cancer Study Group". Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 87 (9): 645–51. doi:10.1093/jnci/87.9.645. PMID 7752269.
  7. ^ Wellington K, Keam SJ (2006). "Bicalutamide 150mg: a review of its use in the treatment of locally advanced prostate cancer". Drugs. 66 (6): 837–50. doi:10.2165/00003495-200666060-00007. PMID 16706554. S2CID 46966712.
  8. ^ Klotz L, Schellhammer P (March 2005). "Combined androgen blockade: the case for bicalutamide". Clinical Prostate Cancer. 3 (4): 215–9. doi:10.3816/cgc.2005.n.002. PMID 15882477.
  9. ^ Henderson BE, Ross R, Bernstein L (January 1988). "Estrogens as a cause of human cancer: the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Foundation award lecture". Cancer Research. 48 (2): 246–53. PMID 2825969.