Inhibition Of Estrogen Signalling By Androgen Receptors: A Potential Mechanism For Suppression Of Breast Cancer Growth.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$525,000.00
Summary
Breast cancer is a major health problem in Western countries including Australia, where it is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in women. Breast cells require female sex hormones, called estrogens, for their growth and survival and consequently most current treatments for breast cancer aim to block the actions of these hormones in breast cancer cells. However there is still a large proportion of women who do not respond to these therapies or have an initial response but subsequently deve ....Breast cancer is a major health problem in Western countries including Australia, where it is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in women. Breast cells require female sex hormones, called estrogens, for their growth and survival and consequently most current treatments for breast cancer aim to block the actions of these hormones in breast cancer cells. However there is still a large proportion of women who do not respond to these therapies or have an initial response but subsequently develop resistance. Evidence from our laboratory and others indicates that the male sex hormones, androgens, also play an important role in breast cancer. Androgens oppose the effects of estrogens in breast cancer cells, and inhibit their growth. Historically androgens were used to treat patients with advanced breast cancer, with good results, but the masculinising side effects (eg excess hair growth and acne) of these hormones led to a discontinuation of their use since the 1960s. The major objective of our current studies is to determine how androgens can stop breast cancer cells from growing by investigating the effects of the androgen receptor, which mediates the growth regulatory effects of androgens, in breast cancer cells. We believe that a better understanding of this signalling pathway could potentially lead to new treatments for breast cancer that act more specifically to inhibit cancer growth without the unpleasant side effects of androgenic drugs.Read moreRead less
A Clinical Trial Evaluating Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy For Women With Large Operable Or Locally Advanced Breast Cancer.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$269,805.00
Summary
Larger operable and locally advanced breast cancers (BC) which can involve the skin of the breast and lymph nodes under the arm are associated with poorer survival. Standard treatment usually includes neoadjuvant (or preoperative) chemotherapy to try to reduce the size of the cancer, followed by surgery and radiation therapy to treat any remaining cancer in the breast. Many women, despite maximum treatment, will still die from their disease, hence the need to develop more effective drug therapie ....Larger operable and locally advanced breast cancers (BC) which can involve the skin of the breast and lymph nodes under the arm are associated with poorer survival. Standard treatment usually includes neoadjuvant (or preoperative) chemotherapy to try to reduce the size of the cancer, followed by surgery and radiation therapy to treat any remaining cancer in the breast. Many women, despite maximum treatment, will still die from their disease, hence the need to develop more effective drug therapies. The advantages of neoadjuvant chemotherapy include: the potential to reduce the size of the breast cancer which may allow breast conserving surgery rather than mastectomy; and, the ability to directly assess the response of breast cancers to new drug treatments. This new research project aims to evaluate standard chemotherapy (epirubicin and cyclophosphamide) followed by a course of two newer, possibly more beneficial, chemotherapy drugs for breast cancer (docetaxel and gemcitabine (DG)) followed by surgery, in women with large operable-locally advanced breast cancer. The trial will allow patients with HER2 positive breast cancer to receive trastuzumab (Herceptin ) in addition to the DG chemotherapy treatment cycles. The study will measure the tumour response rates, efficacy and safety of the proposed treatments. Patients will be asked to consent to an extra core biopsy and a small sample of their breast tissue collected at the time of their breast surgery to be used for research to help better understand the biology of the disease and responses to treatment. The study could plausibly offer a better treatment for patients, resulting in a better prognosis for women who present with large operable or locally advanced breast cancer. The trial will be conducted, in Australia and New Zealand, by the Australian New Zealand Breast Cancer Trials Group (ANZ BCTG) and will involve approximately twenty Australian hospitals.Read moreRead less