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Fulvestrant... The New Nolva????

BionicBC

A 'HALO' over my head...
Platinum
Fulvestrant
THE OFFICIAL WEBSITE: http://www.faslodex.com/

A newer drug that works in a similar fashion to tamoxifen is fulvestrant. Fulvestrant, like tamoxifen, attaches to the estrogen receptor but, unlike tamoxifen, it destroys the receptor, thereby blocking all estrogen activity. This drug is given once a month by intramuscular injection for as long as it is beneficial in the treatment of advanced disease. It is not yet approved for use as an adjuvant treatment (a treatment that enhances the effects of the primary treatment).
 
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Possible, but it's probably quite expensive. Also, obviously it's not as easy to tailor the dosage if it's once a month IM injection. Plus it's a suicide inhibitor, destroys the actual receptor, and you need SOME estrogen in your system to function normally. If this lowered your amount of available receptors too low, it could hurt you. More research needed on this drug, but again, interesting read. If I can give you K I will, but I think I hit you too recently :)
 
No one else? Damn, if i were to put a post up asking whick was better, dbol or drol, id have 500 responses. Post something halfway intelligent, and you get one reply...
Bionic
 
Better Than Arimidex????

Stacemranger said:
got any more info Bionic?



Fulvestrant: New Treatment Option
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A new drug called fulvestrant (Faslodex®) was as effective as another drug, anastrozole (Arimidex®), in postmenopausal women with advanced, previously treated breast cancer, according to two studies published in the August 15, 2002, issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology. It is too soon to say, however, whether patients treated with fulvestrant live longer than those treated with anastrozole.

The women in the studies had been previously treated with the drug tamoxifen, only to have their breast cancer return. Anastrozole belongs to a class of drugs called aromatase inhibitors (AIs). Drugs from this class are the current standard therapy for breast cancer that has recurred or progressed after treatment with tamoxifen.

The new fulvestrant results "mean that patients with advanced breast cancer and their doctors now have an additional treatment option," said Jeff Abrams, M.D., of the National Cancer Institute's Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program.

The first of the two studies involved 400 patients in the United States and Canada who were randomly assigned to receive either fulvestrant or anastrozole (see the journal abstract). Fulvestrant is given as a monthly injection, anastrozole as a daily pill, so the researchers included in their study two placebos, or dummy treatments. Patients who received the fulvestrant injection also received a dummy pill; those who were given the anastrozole pill were also injected with a dummy substance. Neither patients or their doctors knew which was the active treatment. This kind of "double-blind" approach helps to prevent the kind of bias that can weaken study results.

After an average of 17 months of follow-up, fulvestrant delayed disease progression by 5.4 months on average, compared with 3.4 months for anastrozole. This difference, however, was not statistically significant (that is, it could have occurred by chance). In patients who responded to treatment, the average duration of response was 19 months for those treated with fulvestrant and 11 months for those who received anastrozole. The number of patients experiencing adverse effects of treatment, as well as the severity of those adverse effects, were similar in both groups.

In the second study (see the journal abstract), 451 patients in Europe, South Africa, and Australia were randomly assigned to receive either fulvestrant by monthly injection or anastrozole in a daily pill. Unlike the U.S.-Canadian study, this study was not designed in a double-blinded fashion. Thus, both patients and their doctors knew who was receiving which treatment.

The results of this study were very similar to those of the U.S.-Canadian study. Response rates and delays in disease progression were about the same in both groups of patients.

Now that fulvestrant appears to be as effective as anastrozole, doctors and patients should consider several factors, including the patient's prior treatment and each drug's side effects, when making treatment decisions, said Abrams.

"If a patient gets tamoxifen as first-line therapy," said Abrams, "then either fulvestrant or an AI is a reasonable second-line choice. However, some patients are getting AIs first-line now, so the actual choice for some may be between fulvestrant and tamoxifen."

Fulvestrant has been shown to work in patients whose tumors progressed after treatment with tamoxifen. But it's not yet known whether the opposite is true -- that is, whether tamoxifen helps patients whose tumors have recurred after treatment with fulvestrant. For this reason, said Abrams, "it would be reasonable to use tamoxifen or an AI first and save fulvestrant for second-line therapy."

Tamoxifen, AIs, and fulvestrant are effective only in patients whose tumors are sensitive to the hormones estrogen and progesterone. The drugs work in different ways to prevent these hormones from stimulating breast cancer growth.

Tamoxifen attaches to the estrogen receptor in the tumor, which blocks estrogen's effect on the cancer cells in breast tissue but may mimic the effect of estrogen elsewhere, such as the uterus or bone. AIs, by contrast, reduce overall estrogen levels by inhibiting the body's production of the hormone. Fulvestrant, like tamoxifen, attaches to the estrogen receptor but, unlike tamoxifen, it destroys the receptor, thereby blocking all estrogen activity.

Because of their different mechanisms of action, the drugs have different side effects, explained Abrams. "Tamoxifen has protective effects against osteoporosis because it stimulates the estrogen receptor in bone. AIs and fulvestrant do not seem to have this protective effect on bone, whereas tamoxifen, by stimulating the estrogen receptor in the uterus, increases the risk of endometrial cancer. AIs and fulvestrant are unlikely to have this effect on the uterus."

Finally, tamoxifen is effective in premenopausal women with breast cancer whereas AIs are not, said Abrams. Clinical studies have not yet shown whether fulvestrant is effective in premenopausal women.
 
^^^
 
ttt
 
Thanks for introducing with Fulvestrant which is new drug that works in a similar fashion to tamoxifen and how to consume it related guidance.
 
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