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Clinical
and radiographic response in a minority of patients with recurrent malignant
gliomas treated with high-dose tamoxifen
Couldwell
WT, Weiss MH, DeGiorgio CM, Weiner LP, Hinton DR, Ehresmann GR, Conti PS, Apuzzo
ML.
Department
of Neurological Surgery, University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Previous
work has demonstrated the importance of the Protein Kinase C (PKC) signal
transduction system in regulating the growth rate of malignant gliomas in vitro.
Tamoxifen inhibits PKC in a minority of malignant gliomas within the micromolar
concentration range in vitro, a property distinct from its estrogen receptor
blockade effect.
Tamoxifen was administered orally in very high dosages to 11
patients (9 males:2 females, age range 26-73, mean 45 years) with malignant
gliomas (anaplastic astrocytoma or glioblastoma multiforme) who had failed
treatment with external beam radiation therapy (and additional chemotherapy in
2).
The dosage administered was estimated to be that necessary to achieve tissue
concentrations within the low micromolar range, shown necessary to inhibit PKC
in these tumors in vitro, and is approximately 5 times that used for standard
antiestrogen therapy.
Tumor reduction on radiographic images (MRI and PET [18FdG
uptake]) with clinical improvement occurred in 3 patients; halting of tumor
progression clinically and radiographically occurred in an additional patient.
Of the remaining seven patients, three patients had marked and rapid progression
of their disease despite treatment (dead after 3, 4, and 6 months respectively).
Complications of treatment included a deep venous thrombosis requiring
anticoagulation in one patient, nausea in one patient, and
"hot-flashes" in a third patient.
Tumor biopsy and measurement of
tamoxifen and its active metabolite within the tumor of one patient
(non-responder) showed levels within the middle of the in vitro therapeutic
range.
Follow-up of alive patients ranges from 4-18 months (mean 10 months).
These encouraging preliminary results in a minority of these patients suggests
some potential for this type of therapy.
If PKC is the true target for any beneficial effect from tamoxifen
therapy, this emphasizes the importance of clinical trials using
other existing PKC inhibitors with increased potency and specificity
for PKC.
PMID:
8384328 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8384328&dopt=Abstract
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