Comprehensive pharmacology and clinical efficacy of aromatase inhibitors
- PMID: 10473018
- DOI: 10.2165/00003495-199958020-00003
Comprehensive pharmacology and clinical efficacy of aromatase inhibitors
Abstract
The goal of hormone therapy is to deprive breast tumours of estrogens, since estrogens have been implicated in the development or progression of tumours. This can be accomplished by the use of antiestrogens that block estrogen action or by inhibiting aromatase, the enzyme that catalyses the final and rate-limiting step in estrogen biosynthesis. A number of steroidal and nonsteroidal compounds have been developed as aromatase inhibitors. This review highlights the valuable role that a few of these aromatase inhibitors have played, and continue to play, in the treatment of breast cancer. Following background information regarding the biochemistry of aromatase, the rationale for its inhibition, and an outline of the test systems for evaluating and characterising aromatase inhibitors, the discussion focuses on the new generation of aromatase inhibitors that are in clinical trials or clinically available. Specifically, it discusses the pharmacology and clinical efficacy of formestane, exemestane, rogletimide, fadrozole, vorozole, anastrozole and letrozole. The role of these agents as the optimal second-line agents (after tamoxifen) for the treatment of advanced breast cancer has been established; their prospects in other clinical settings and as potential breast cancer chemopreventives are warranted but are yet to be fully determined.
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