10 results match your criteria: "Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders[Affiliation]"
Anticancer Res
February 2024
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
Background/aim: Progesterone receptor antagonists have been found to provide significant extension of life and considerable palliative benefits in a large variety of very advanced cancers. Most of these treated cancers lack the classical nuclear progesterone receptor (nPR). The hypothesized targets are membrane (m) PRs to inhibit progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
March 2023
Department of Medicine, Division of Allergy and Immunology, State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, U.S.A.
The most recent successful advances in lung cancer therapy have directly and increasingly focused on personalized tumor genetic/epigenetic/immunologic profiling, and the identification and development of novel pharmacologic agents aimed at those mutations [e.g., epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), Kristen rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (KRAS), anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) and immunotherapy against programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and its ligands] which have extended life and provided palliation for lung cancer-patients positive for these mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpert Rev Endocrinol Metab
January 2023
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders P.C, Mt. Laurel, New Jersey, USA.
Introduction: Patients with various advanced cancers devoid of nuclear progesterone receptors (nPR) have demonstrated increased quality and length of life when treated with the PR modulator mifepristone, which likely works by interacting with membrane PRs (mPR).
Areas Covered: Two immunomodulatory proteins are discussed that seem to play a role in cancers that proliferate whether the malignant tumor is positive or negative for the nPR. These two proteins are the progesterone receptor membrane component-1 (PGRMC-1) and the progesterone-induced blocking factor (PIBF).
Anticancer Res
December 2021
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
Mifepristone treatment for advanced cancer has demonstrated considerable improvement in both length and quality of life in patients who no longer have any other treatment options. The target is the progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF), which helps the tumor to invade the normal tissue and proliferate and suppress cellular immunity. Most of the benefit has been observed in cancers not associated with the classical nuclear progesterone receptor (nPR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
November 2021
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054, USA.
Cancer and the fetal-placental semi-allograft share certain characteristics, e.g., rapid proliferation, the capacity to invade normal tissue, and, related to the presence of antigens foreign to the host, the need to evade immune surveillance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
April 2021
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
Background/aim: It has been hypothesized that many, or even most cancers, utilize a unique immunomodulatory protein, called the progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF) to allow spread of the cancer. Support for this concept has been provided by cancer cell line studies showing that PIBF is produced by these cancer cells and mifepristone suppresses this protein and inhibits proliferation of these cells. Furthermore, controlled murine studies with several spontaneous different types of cancer showed a clear beneficial effect of mifepristone over placebo control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
December 2020
Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Camden, NJ, U.S.A.
Background: There is evidence that a unique immunomodulatory protein, known as the progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF), is utilized by a large variety of cancers to escape immune surveillance. Mifepristone, a progesterone receptor antagonist/modulator, anecdotally, has been found to increase both length and quality of life in many different types of advanced cancers.
Case Report: Though there was one previous case of pancreatic cancer that showed a significant reduction in pain for the one month she took mifepristone before changing to an experimental drug, the case presented here provided much greater evidence that this drug can markedly improve both length and quality of life, in at least some patients, with very advanced pancreatic cancer.
Anticancer Res
July 2019
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
Progesterone induced blocking factor (PIBF) is a unique protein that is not present in normal cells, but is found predominantly in rapidly growing cells of the fetal placental unit or cancer cells. There is a larger "parent" form that is a nuclear protein involved in cell to cell regulation, allowing tumor cells to proliferate and invade tissues. The parent compound is cleaved into smaller intracytoplasmic isoforms that can suppress cellular immune response, especially, but not limited to natural killer cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
April 2019
Kennedy Medical Campus, Sewell, NJ, U.S.A.
Case Report: Case 1 of an investigator-initiated study using oral single agent mifepristone to halt stage IV non-small cell lung cancer whose tumor was devoid of any targeted markers has remained ECOG zero and in good health for over 3 years. Case 2, reported here, is a 68-year-old woman with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer whose tumor was positive for the programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) marker. Her cancer progressed despite treatment with a check-point inhibitor (nivolumab), besides 3 rounds of multi-agent chemotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Res
December 2016
Cooper Institute for Reproductive Hormonal Disorders, P.C., Mt. Laurel, NJ, U.S.A.
Case Report: We show long-term high-quality survival following single-agent treatment with a progesterone receptor antagonist in two cases of advanced metastatic cancer. Because no biopsy was performed (patient refused) the exact type of lung cancer was not determined but the majority of oncologists who evaluated the patient thought that the rapid onset and syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuretic hormone was more consistent with small-cell lung cancer. The US Food and Drug Association granted a compassionate-use investigational new drug approval for use of single-agent 200 mg mifepristone orally/day to a moribund woman with never-treated metastatic lung cancer and a male with bilateral renal cell carcinoma who had undergone only a unilateral hemi-nephrectomy.
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