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Aromatase Inhibitors
Furr, B.J.A.
2ª Edición Enero 2008
Inglés
Tapa blanda
189 pags
900 gr
null x null x null cm
ISBN 9783764386924
Editorial SPRINGER
Many breast tumours are dependent upon oestrogen for their development and
continued growth. Over the last 25 years hormone therapy has progressed from
the irreversible destruction of endocrine glands to the use of drugs that reversibly
suppress oestrogen synthesis or action. The inhibition of oestrogen synthesis
is most readily achieved by inhibiting the final step in the pathway of oestrogen
biosynthesis, the reaction which transforms androgens into oestrogens by creating
an aromatic ring in the steroid molecule (hence the enzyme's trivial name, aromatase).
Whereas the first aromatase inhibitors to be used therapeutically could be shown
to produce drug-induced inhibition of the enzyme and therapeutic benefits in
patients with breast cancer, they were not particularly potent and lacked specificity.
However, second-generation drugs were developed and most recently third-generation
inhibitors have evolved which possess remarkable specificity and potency. Initial
results from clinical trials suggest that these agents will become the cornerstones
of future endocrine therapy.
Written for:
Scientific libraries, pharmaceutical industry, researchers and clinicians
Keywords:
- Anastrazole
- Breast Cancer
- Brustkrebs
- Clinical Overview
- Clinical Pharmacology
- Drugs
- Exemestane
- Letrazole
- Treatment
Table of contents
Background and development of aromatase inhibitors.- Aromatase inhibitors and models for breast cancer.- Clinical pharmacology of aromatase inhibitors.- Clinical studies with exemestane.- Clinical studies with letrozole.- Clinical studies with anastrozole.- The third-generation aromatase inhibitors: a clinical overview.- Lessons from the ArKO mouse.- Possible additional therapeutic uses of aromatase inhibitors
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