The World of Health & Medicine News

Health Rounds: Scientists find way to make breast cancer drug work better for younger women

Health Rounds: Scientists find way to make breast cancer drug work better for younger women

Researchers appear to have found a solution for breast cancer patients who do not respond well enough to the common treatment tamoxifen, according to results from a German study.

Tamoxifen works by preventing the hormone estrogen from binding to proteins on cancer cell surfaces, keeping the cancer from growing.

To work well, tamoxifen must be converted by the enzyme CYP2D6 into a form called (Z)-endoxifen. But in about a third of patients, levels of that enzyme are genetically low. As a result, the conversion is impaired.

Postmenopausal women can use alternative drugs known as aromatase inhibitors, but those are not an option for younger patients.

In such cases, giving supplemental (Z)-endoxifen compensates for the insufficient conversion of tamoxifen and makes it more effective, researchers reported in Clinical Cancer Research, opens new tab.

In the study, 235 patients with early-stage hormone-dependent breast cancer received either tamoxifen alone or in combination with (Z)-endoxifen, depending on whether tamoxifen was being metabolized appropriately.

The patients receiving combination therapy achieved desired drug concentrations in the blood similar to those found in patients with normal metabolism who received tamoxifen alone.

Side effects were mild and similar in both groups, according to the report.

“With (this approach), we are offering the first effective solution to a long-standing problem: the insufficient effect of tamoxifen in a significant proportion of patients,” study leader Dr. Matthias Schwab of the Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch Institute of Clinical Pharmacology in Stuttgart said in a statement.

A mid-stage trial testing (Z)-endoxifen in premenopausal women with newly diagnosed early-stage hormone-responsive breast cancer is underway in the United States.

Study sponsor Atossa Therapeutics (ATOS.O), opens new tab has said it plans to file an application seeking approval with the Food and Drug Administration in 2026.

spot_img

Explore more

spot_img

Bavarian Nordic signs EU smallpox and mpox vaccine contract for up...

Bavarian Nordic signs EU smallpox and mpox vaccine contract for up to 8 million doses Bavarian Nordic announced on Friday a new contract with the...

WHO says mpox now detected in more countries, with 17 deaths...

WHO says mpox now detected in more countries, with 17 deaths in Africa over six weeks The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday that...

Metsera the US obesity biotech at centre of Novo, Pfizer bidding...

Metsera the US obesity biotech at centre of Novo, Pfizer bidding war Metsera has become the obesity drug market's hottest ticket. The New York-based biotech is...

Eli Lilly says weight-loss pill a candidate for speedy approval under...

Eli Lilly says weight-loss pill a candidate for speedy approval under new US programme Eli Lilly said its experimental weight-loss pill met most criteria for...

BridgeBio surges as muscle disorder drug scores ‘best case’ trial win

BridgeBio surges as muscle disorder drug scores 'best case' trial win BridgeBio Pharma (BBIO.O), opens new tab said on Monday its experimental drug for a rare muscle...

US FDA warns four firms over unapproved fluoride drugs for children

US FDA warns four firms over unapproved fluoride drugs for children The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Friday it warned four companies that...

Inhibrx shares surge after bone cancer drug slows disease progression in...

Inhibrx shares surge after bone cancer drug slows disease progression in trial Inhibrx Biosciences said on Thursday its experimental drug helped slow the progression of...

Investors managing $11.5 trillion urge food companies to diversify away from...

Investors managing $11.5 trillion urge food companies to diversify away from animal proteins  Investors managing $11.5 trillion in assets are calling on major food companies...