Estrogen
Pills can benefit Women with Metastatic
Breast Cancer
Newswise — For breast cancer survivors, the
idea of taking estrogen pills is almost a
taboo. In fact, their doctors give them
drugs to get rid of the hormone because it
can fuel the growth of breast cancer.
So these women would probably be surprised
by the approach taken by breast cancer
physician Matthew Ellis, M.B., Ph.D.,
associate professor of medicine at
Washington University School of Medicine in
St. Louis — he has demonstrated that
estrogen therapy can help control metastatic
breast cancer.
In a study presented at the 31st annual San
Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, he showed
that for about a third of the 66
participants — women with metastatic breast
cancer that had developed resistance to
standard estrogen-lowering therapy — a daily
dose of estrogen could stop the growth of
their tumors or even cause them to shrink.
The study was funded by the Avon Foundation
through the National Cancer Institute and
included six cancer centers in the United
States.
Ellis believes that estrogen therapy offers
an appealing alternative to chemotherapy for
metastatic breast cancer that has become
resistant to estrogen-lowering agents called
aromatase inhibitors, such as exemestane,
anastrazole and letrozole.
These drugs deplete the body of estrogen and
are standard treatments for hormone-receptor
positive breast cancers, which account for
about 75 percent of breast cancer cases.
"By stabilizing or shrinking tumors in some
women with metastatic breast cancer,
estrogen therapy can relieve pain and other
symptoms of cancer and can potentially
prolong lives," says Ellis, an oncologist
with the Siteman Cancer Center at Washington
University School of Medicine and
Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
"And unlike chemotherapy, estrogen enhances
the quality of life. For many of our
patients, their hot flashes disappear, and
they lose other symptoms of menopause.
"It's
a natural treatment for breast cancer. Not
only that, it's much cheaper than
chemotherapy, costing less than a dollar a
day."
Furthermore, estrogen seems able to return
metastatic tumors to a vulnerable state in
which they again can be affected by
aromatase inhibitors.
"We thought acquired resistance to aromatase
inhibitor therapy was permanent," Ellis
says.
"But now we've shown that in some patients
giving estrogen can make it possible to
cycle back to aromatase inhibitors, and they
can work again."
About 40,000 women die of metastatic breast
cancer each year, and estrogen therapy
potentially could help thousands of women
with hormone receptor-positive disease,
Ellis says.
The study measured how many women with
aromatase inhibitor therapy-resistant
metastatic breast cancer responded to
estrogen therapy.
All study participants had estrogen-receptor
positive tumors that had spread to their
bones, livers or lungs. The women were
postmenopausal with an average age of 59.
Coming into the study, all the participants
were taking aromatase inhibitors to slow or
stop the growth of their tumors.
But their tumors had stopped responding to
the treatment and had begun to grow again.
Half of the patients got a high dose of
estrogen (30 milligrams a day) and half got
a low dose (6 milligrams a day).
Ellis points out that decades ago, high-dose
synthetic estrogen was an accepted breast
cancer therapy and was only abandoned when
the estrogen-blocker tamoxifen came along in
the 1970s and proved just as effective with
fewer side effects.
The high dose in the current study was based
on the amount given to breast cancer
patients in many of those earlier regimens.
Both the high- and low-dose treatments led
to stabilization or shrinkage of metastatic
tumors in about 30 percent of the
participants.
But the high-dose regimen had significant
side effects such as nausea, vomiting,
vaginal bleeding, fluid retention or calcium
imbalances. In contrast, the low-dose
regimen had few side effects and was well
tolerated.
The researchers found that if study
participants eventually experienced disease
progression on estrogen, they could go back
to an aromatase inhibitor that they were
previously resistant to and see a benefit —
their tumors were once again inhibited by
estrogen deprivation.
That effect sometimes wore off after several
months, but then the tumors might again be
sensitive to estrogen therapy. In fact, some
patients have cycled back and forth between
estrogen and an aromatase inhibitor for
several years, thereby managing their
metastatic disease.
The researchers also found that PET
(positron emission tomography) scans could
predict whose tumors would respond to
estrogen therapy.
They measured tumor glucose uptake before
starting the women on estrogen and again 24
hours later.
The patients whose tumors showed an
increased glucose uptake, called a PET
flare, were the same patients who benefited
from estrogen therapy.
It's too early to know why estrogen has a
negative effect on metastatic breast cancer
tumors. But Ellis has found one clue —
estrogen reduces the amount of a
tumor-promoting hormone called insulin-like
growth factor-1 (IGF1).
"I think that in order for breast cancer
cells to survive in the absence of estrogen
(when patients are on aromatase inhibitors),
the cells have to learn to alter their
cellular programs to utilize alternative
growth signals like IGF1," Ellis says.
"In theory, when you give estrogen back,
IGF1 decreases and cancer cells die as a
consequence.
"But
surviving cancer cells prefer to switch back
to living on estrogen — to them it's like
eating out at McDonald's every day instead
of foraging on roots and berries.
"These
cells eventually reappear as estrogen
dependent tumors and the cycle starts over."
Ellis plans to continue to follow metastatic
breast cancer patients to quantify the
response rate to retreatment with aromatase
inhibitors when estrogen therapy stops
working.
In addition to the Siteman Cancer Center,
participating institutions included the
University of Chicago, Case Western Reserve
University, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center, the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill and Duke University Medical
Center.
Funding from the Avon Foundation and the
National Cancer Institute supported this
research.
Washington University School of Medicine's
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one of the leading
medical research, teaching and patient care
institutions in the nation, currently ranked
third in the nation by U.S. News & World
Report.
Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish
and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the
School of Medicine is linked to BJC
HealthCare.
Siteman Cancer Center is the only federally
designated Comprehensive Cancer Center
within a 240-mile radius of St. Louis.
Siteman Cancer Center is composed of the
combined cancer research and treatment
programs of Barnes-Jewish Hospital and
Washington University School of Medicine.
Siteman has satellite locations in West
County and St. Peters, in addition to its
full-service facility at Washington
University Medical Center on South
Kingshighway.
The Avon Foundation, a 501(c)(3) public
charity, was launched in 1955 with a single
scholarship of $400 and has grown to be a
leader in the breast cancer and domestic
violence causes worldwide.
By the end of 2008, Avon philanthropy will
have raised and awarded more than $660
million in over 50 countries in support of
the mission to improve the lives of women
globally.
The Avon Breast Cancer Crusade launched in
1992 and focuses on advancing access to care
for all, regardless of ability to pay, and
eradicating breast cancer.
Funds are awarded for breast cancer
education and awareness; screening and
diagnosis; access to treatment; support
services; and medical research.
The Speak Out Against Domestic Violence
initiative was launched in 2004, focusing on
awareness, education, direct service
programs and prevention, with a special
emphasis on children affected by domestic
violence. More information:
www.avonfoundation.org.