We compared the efficacy of endometrial cancer neoadjuvant treatment in 38 patients receiving nonsteroid (letrozol, anastrozol) or steroid (ekzemestan) aromatase inhibitors and 12 patients receiving metformin. The changes in glucose metabolism were revealed in 26.3% of patients treated with aromatase inhibitors and 16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical and experimental effects of neoadjuvant treatment of endometrial cancer patients with non-steroidal aromatase inhibitors: letrozole (femara, n=10, 2.5 mg/day, 14 days), anastrozole (arimidex, n=15,1 mg/day, 28 days) and exemestane (aromazine, n=13, 25 mg/day, 14 days) were compared. Administration of anastrozole was mostly frequently followed by pain relief in the lower abdomen and/or decreased rates of uterine discharge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Steroid Biochem Mol Biol
May 2005
Aromatase activity (AA) was evaluated totally in 80 tumors collected from primary endometrial cancer (EC) patients. All patients were divided into cases belonging to the types I or II of EC (respectively, 50 and 30 observations). Samples of malignant endometrium from type II demonstrated inclination to the higher AA in comparison with type I samples; the difference reached level of statistical significance in non-smoking patients (p=0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical and endocrine-related effects of 2-week preoperative treatment of endometrial carcinoma patients with a non-steroid inhibitor of letrozole aromatase (femara 2.5 mg/day, n=10) and a steroid inactivator of the enzyme (exemestane 25 mg/day, n=13) were compared. In the first group, pain relief in the lower part of the belly and/or decreased uterine discharge were reported in two cases, as well as a 31% drop in the mean endometrial M-echo (ultrasound) signal.
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