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[Cancer Research 65, 8504-8513, September 15, 2005]
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research


Endocrinology

Trastuzumab Therapy for Tamoxifen-Stimulated Endometrial Cancer

Clodia Osipo1, Kathleen Meeke1, Hong Liu1, Dong Cheng1, Sherry Lim1, Alyssa Weichel1 and V. Craig Jordan1,2

1 Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois and 2 Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Requests for reprints: V. Craig Jordan, OBE, PhD, Dsc. Vice President and Research Director for Medical Science, Alfred G. Knudson Chair of Cancer Research. Fox Chase Cancer Center, 333 Cottman Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19111-2497. E-mail: V.Craig.Jordan{at}fccc.edu.

A novel in vivo model of tamoxifen-stimulated endometrial cancer was developed and the role of HER-2/neu investigated by using trastuzumab. Tamoxifen-stimulated tumors (ECC-1TAM) were growth stimulated by 17ß-estradiol (E2), tamoxifen, or raloxifene. Trastuzumab inhibited growth of E2-stimulated ECC-1E2 tumors by 50% and tamoxifen-stimulated ECC-1TAM tumors by 100%. ECC-1 tumors expressed functional estrogen receptor {alpha} (ER{alpha}) as measured by induction of pS2 and c-myc mRNAs. E2 induced pS2 and c-myc mRNAs up to 40-fold in ECC-1E2 and ECC-1TAM. Tamoxifen induced pS2 and c-myc mRNAs up to 5-fold in ECC-1E2 tumors and up to 10-fold in ECC-TAM tumors. Trastuzumab blocked E2-induced pS2 mRNA (P < 0.01) in ECC-1E2 by 50% and tamoxifen-induced c-myc mRNA (P < 0.1) in ECC-1TAM tumors by 70%. Trastuzumab decreased phosphorylated and total HER-2/neu protein in ECC-1E2 and ECC-1TAM tumors. However, only phospho-ERK-1/2 and not phospho-Akt protein was decreased by trastuzumab in tamoxifen-treated ECC-1TAM tumors. The insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) signaling pathway also activates extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK)-1/2 and could block the efficacy of trastuzumab in ECC-1E2 tumors. The results showed that IGF-I, IGF-IR mRNAs, and phospho-insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) protein were decreased in ECC-1TAM compared with ECC-1E2 tumors. The results show that trastuzumab is an effective therapy for both E2-stimulated and tamoxifen-stimulated endometrial cancer. The data suggest estrogenic activities of E2 and tamoxifen at ER{alpha}-regulated pS2 and c-myc genes are in part mediated by HER-2/neu. However, trastuzumab is a better growth inhibitor of ECC-1TAM tumors where there is diminished IGF-I signaling allowing for complete blockade of the downstream phospho-ERK-1/2 signal.




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The 38th David A. Karnofsky Lecture: The Paradoxical Actions of Estrogen in Breast Cancer--Survival or Death?
J. Clin. Oncol., June 20, 2008; 26(18): 3073 - 3082.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 2005 by the American Association for Cancer Research.