Intro & MoA Principles - Hormone Hijackers
Targets hormone-sensitive cancers by disrupting endocrine pathways vital for their growth.
- Goal: Interfere with hormone synthesis, release, or receptor binding.
- Key Mechanisms:
- Receptor Antagonism: Block Estrogen Receptors (ER) in breast cancer, Androgen Receptors (AR) in prostate cancer.
- Synthesis Inhibition: ↓ hormone production (e.g., aromatase inhibitors ↓ estrogen; GnRH analogues: pituitary desensitization → ↓ sex hormones).
- Hormone Deprivation: Overall ↓ in circulating or local active hormones available to cancer cells.
- Common Targets: Hormone Receptor-positive (HR+) Breast, Prostate, Endometrial, and Ovarian cancers.

⭐ Many hormonal therapies are cytostatic (arrest cell growth) rather than cytotoxic, controlling tumor progression, often used for long-term or adjuvant treatment strategies to prevent recurrence.
Anti-Estrogens & AIs - Estro-Stoppers
- Anti-Estrogens (Target ER):
- SERMs (Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators):
- Tamoxifen: ER antagonist (breast); agonist (bone, endometrium). Use: ER+ breast Ca (pre/postmeno). SE: Hot flashes, ↑ endometrial Ca, DVT/PE. 📌 TAM: Tummy, Thrombo.
- Raloxifene: ER antag (breast, endometrium); agonist (bone). Use: Osteoporosis, breast Ca prevention (postmeno). No ↑ endometrial Ca.
- Fulvestrant (SERD): Pure ER antagonist, degrades ER. Use: Tamoxifen-resistant ER+ breast Ca.
- SERMs (Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators):
- Aromatase Inhibitors (AIs) (Block Estrogen Synthesis):
- MOA: Inhibit aromatase.
- Types: Non-steroidal (Anastrozole, Letrozole); Steroidal (Exemestane - irreversible).
- Use: ER+ breast Ca (POSTMENOPAUSAL).
- SE: Arthralgia, bone loss (↑ fracture risk), hot flashes.
⭐ AIs are often first-line for adjuvant ER+ breast Ca in postmenopausal women.

Anti-Androgens & GnRH Agents - Testo-Terminators
- Anti-Androgens: Block Androgen Receptor (AR) or inhibit androgen synthesis.
- AR Antagonists (Non-steroidal):
- "-lutamides": Flutamide (hepatotoxic), Bicalutamide, Nilutamide.
- Newer: Enzalutamide (seizure risk), Apalutamide, Darolutamide (improved CNS safety).
- SE: Gynecomastia, hot flashes, ↓libido.
- Androgen Synthesis Inhibitor:
- Abiraterone (CYP17A1 inhibitor): Give with prednisone. SE: Mineralocorticoid excess (HTN, ↓K+).
- AR Antagonists (Non-steroidal):
- GnRH (LHRH) Agents: Achieve medical castration.
- Agonists: Leuprolide, Goserelin. Initial flare (use anti-androgen cover), then ↓testosterone.
- Antagonists: Degarelix, Relugolix (oral). No flare, rapid ↓testosterone.
- Primary Use: Prostate cancer.
- 📌 CAB (Combined Androgen Blockade): GnRH agonist + Anti-androgen.

⭐ Degarelix, a GnRH antagonist, provides rapid testosterone suppression without the initial tumor flare characteristic of GnRH agonists (e.g., Leuprolide).
Other Hormonal Agents - Hormone Helpers
- Progestins:
- Examples: Megestrol acetate, Medroxyprogesterone acetate.
- Key Uses:
- Endometrial, breast, prostate Ca (palliative).
- Cancer cachexia (↑appetite).
- Mechanism: Downregulate estrogen receptors; high-dose direct cytotoxicity.
- Corticosteroids: (e.g., Prednisone, Dexamethasone)
- Malignancies: Lymphomas, leukemias (ALL, CLL), multiple myeloma.
- Palliative roles: ↓inflammation, ↓pain, ↓cerebral edema, anti-emetic, ↑appetite, ↑well-being.
- Mechanism: Bind glucocorticoid receptors; induce lymphoid cell apoptosis.
⭐ Dexamethasone is commonly used to reduce peritumoral edema in brain metastases.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Tamoxifen (SERM): ER antagonist (breast), agonist (endometrium); Risks: endometrial Ca, DVT.
- Aromatase inhibitors (Anastrozole): Block estrogen synthesis; For postmenopausal ER+ breast Ca; Risk: osteoporosis.
- GnRH agonists (Leuprolide): Continuous use ↓FSH/LH; For prostate Ca; Initial tumor flare.
- GnRH antagonists (Degarelix): Directly block GnRH receptors, no tumor flare; For prostate Ca.
- Antiandrogens (Flutamide): Block androgen receptor; With GnRH agonists for prostate Ca.
- Fulvestrant (SERD): Pure ER antagonist; For tamoxifen-resistant breast Ca.
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