Although antiestrogen therapies are successful in many patients with estrogen receptor alpha-positive (ERα) breast cancer, 25% to 40% fail to respond. Although multiple mechanisms underlie evasion of these treatments, including tumor heterogeneity and drug-resistant cancer stem cells (CSC), further investigations have been limited by the paucity of preclinical ERα tumor models. Here, we examined a mouse model of prolactin-induced aggressive ERα breast cancer, which mimics the epidemiologic link between prolactin exposure and increased risk for metastatic ERα tumors. Like a subset of ERα patient cancers, the prolactin-induced adenocarcinomas contained two major tumor subpopulations that expressed markers of normal luminal and basal epithelial cells. CSC activity was distributed equally across these two tumor subpopulations. Treatment with the selective estrogen receptor downregulator (SERD), ICI 182,780 (ICI), did not slow tumor growth, but induced adaptive responses in CSC activity, increased markers of plasticity including target gene reporters of Wnt/Notch signaling and epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and increased double-positive (K8/K5) cells. In primary tumorsphere cultures, ICI stimulated CSC self-renewal and was able to overcome the dependence of self-renewal upon Wnt or Notch signaling individually, but not together. Our findings demonstrate that treatment of aggressive mixed lineage ERα breast cancers with a SERD does not inhibit growth, but rather evokes tumor cell plasticity and regenerative CSC activity, predicting likely negative impacts on patient tumors with these characteristics. This study suggests that treatment of a subset of ERα breast cancers with antiestrogen therapies may not only fail to slow growth but also promote aggressive behavior by evoking tumor cell plasticity and regenerative CSC activity. .
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5882549 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-17-0985 | DOI Listing |
Expert Opin Pharmacother
June 2016
b Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences , University of California San Francisco East Bay Physicians Medical Group affiliated with Sutter East Bay Medical Foundation, Berkeley , CA 94704 , USA.
Introduction: Vulvar vaginal atrophy (VVA), a component of genitourinary syndrome of menopause, is a chronic, progressive medical condition that results from estrogen deficiency at menopause. Ospemifene is a nonhormonal, estrogen receptor agonist/antagonist (ERAA) FDA-approved for the treatment of moderate to severe dyspareunia, a symptom of VVA, due to menopause.
Areas Covered: PubMed was searched from inception to March 2015 with keywords ospemifene and vulvar vaginal atrophy; no other similar clinical reviews were found.
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