Showing posts with label Study Says. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Study Says. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Gel form of breast cancer drug as effective as pill, study says


Gel tamoxifen effective for breast cancer, fewer side effects than oral form

Woman checking breast Tamoxifen is a hormone drug that binds to estrogen receptors, blocking its actions so that cells - including cancer cells - needing estrogen to divide, stop growing and die. The drug is taken orally to prevent breast cancer in high-risk women and to treat advanced breast cancer. But a new study suggests a gel form of the drug, applied directly to the breast, is just as effective and produces fewer side effects.
Results of the study are published in Clinical Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
Led by Dr. Seema A. Khan, professor of surgery at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, IL, the researchers undertook a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 clinical trial comparing the effects of oral tamoxifen with a breakdown product of the drug - known as 4-OHT - in gel form that was applied to the breasts of women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).

Applying tamoxifen gel directly to the breast is just as effective as taking the drug orally, say researchers, who add that the gel produces fewer side effects.
Overall, the team found that the gel was as effective as oral tamoxifen in reducing cell proliferation, with fewer side effects.
"Oral tamoxifen is used by some women at high risk for breast cancer to prevent the development of the disease," says Dr. Seema, "and our data suggest that gel application of tamoxifen could replace this approach, thus encouraging more women to adhere to preventive therapy."
To conduct their study, the team randomly assigned 26 women with DCIS, who were between the ages of 45-86 years old, to either the 4-OHT gel group or the oral tamoxifen group.
At the baseline of the study, all participants gave a blood sample and completed a questionnaire. Then, for 6-10 weeks prior to surgery, patients in the gel group applied 1 ml of the gel - which contained 2 mg of 4-OHT - to their affected breast each morning. Those in the oral tamoxifen group meanwhile took a 20 mg tamoxifen capsule each day.
At the end of the study, all participants provided another blood sample, and they again completed the questionnaire at 15 days, post-study, and again during a post-surgery visit.

Gel reduced hormonal side effects and blood clottingAfter applying the gel for 6-10 weeks, there was a reduction in a marker of cell proliferation in the participants' breast tissue, which was comparable to that of oral tamoxifen taken during the same period of time.

Additionally, the team found that there were equal amounts of 4-OHT present in the breast tissue of participants from both the gel and oral tamoxifen groups.
However, the levels of 4-OHT in the blood of patients in the gel group was 5.5-fold lower than those from the oral tamoxifen group, which correlates with a reduction in factors that cause blood clots.
Explaining their findings further, Dr. Khan says:
"Tamoxifen has to be broken down by the liver to its active components, which include 4-OHT. In this process, harmful side effects can also arise, such as the activation of proteins that cause blood clots. Because the liver metabolism step is eliminated when the 4-OHT gel is directly applied to breast skin, the harmful effect of increasing the risk for blood clots should also be eliminated."
The American Cancer Society note that clots can cause heart attack, stroke or blockage in the lungs.
Though the gel reduced clots, the researchers note that the gel group did not exhibit any significant improvement in vaginal symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, hot flashes or sweats, compared with those in the oral group.
"We are making rapid advances in improving the efficacy and safety of drugs, but ultimately no progress is possible without public support," says Khan.
The National Institutes of Health and BHR Pharma LLC helped fund the study.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Coffee Can Lower Cancer Risk in Women, Study Says

Coffee
Drinking two or more cups of coffee a day may lower women's risk of developing endometrial cancer, American researchers found.
Scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health analyzed the effect of coffee intake on 67,470 women and found that 672 developed endometrial cancers, which affect the lining of the uterus, over a 26-year period.
Those who drank more than four cups of coffee a day were 25 percent less likely to develop the cancer, while those who had two or three cups had a reduced risk of seven percent, according to the study, published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.
The same link was found in women who drank decaffeinated coffee, with those drinking two cups per day at a 22 percent reduced risk for the cancer.
"Coffee has already been shown to be protective against diabetes due to its effect on insulin," senior researcher Edward Giovannucci said. "So we hypothesized that we'd see a reduction in some cancers, as well."
Giovannucci also warned about the dangers of drinking coffee and smoking.
"Coffee has long been linked with smoking, and if you drink coffee and smoke, the positive effects of coffee are going to be more than outweighed by the negative effects of smoking," he added. "However, laboratory testing has found that coffee has much more antioxidants than most vegetables


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/11/23/coffee-can-lower-cancer-risk-in-women-study-says/#ixzz1eYRNR5tg

Monday, November 14, 2011

New Drug Cuts Deaths After Heart Attack, Study Says

Heart attack iStock


A large study finds that people recovering from a heart attack or severe chest pain are much less likely to suffer another heart-related problem or to die from one if they take a new blood-thinning drug along with standard anti-clotting medicines.
Doctors say the drug, Xarelto (zuh-RELL'-toh), might become a new standard of care for up to a million Americans hospitalized each year for these conditions even though it can cause serious bleeding.
The drug is sold by Johnson & Johnson and Bayer Healthcare for other heart conditions now.
The study tested it in more than 15,000 patients around the world. Results were reported Sunday at an American Heart Association conference in Florida.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/11/14/new-drug-cuts-deaths-after-heart-attack-study-says/#ixzz1dhYp5qkc

552 Million People Could Have Diabetes by 2030, Study Says

Diabetes Definition
The International Diabetes Federation predicts that at least one in 10 adults could have diabetes by 2030, according to its latest statistics.
In a report issued on Monday, the advocacy group estimated that 552 million people could have diabetes in two decades' time based on factors like aging and demographic changes. Currently, the group says that about one adult in 13 has diabetes.
The figure includes both types of diabetes as well as cases that are undiagnosed. The group expects the number of cases to jump by 90 percent even in Africa, where infectious diseases have previously been the top killer. Without including the impact of increasing obesity, the International Diabetes Federation said its figures were conservative.
According to the World Health Organization, there are about 346 million people worldwide with diabetes, with more than 80 percent of deaths occurring in developing countries. The agency projects diabetes deaths will double by 2030 and said the International Diabetes Federation's prediction was possible.
"It's a credible figure," said Gojka Roglic, head of WHO's diabetes unit. "But whether or not it's correct, we can't say."
Roglic said the projected future rise in diabetes cases was because of aging rather than the obesity epidemic. Most cases of diabetes are Type 2, the kind that mainly hits people in middle age, and is linked to weight gain and a sedentary lifestyle.
Roglic said a substantial number of future diabetes cases were preventable. "It's worrying because these people will have an illness which is serious, debilitating, and shortens their lives," she said. "But it doesn't have to happen if we take the right interventions."


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/11/14/552-million-people-could-have-diabetes-by-2030-study-says/#ixzz1dhXH7M9V