(Press-News.org) WINSTON-SALEM, N.C., – Dec. 13, 2012 – Investigators at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center have concluded research on a new postmenopausal hormone therapy that shows promise as an effective treatment for menopausal symptoms and the prevention of osteoporosis without increasing the risk for heart disease or breast cancer.
Traditional forms of hormone therapy (HT) provide the benefits of symptom relief, prevention of osteoporosis and prevention of atherosclerosis, but increase the risk of uterine cancer (with estrogens alone) or breast cancer (with combined estrogens and progestins). Thus, the risk-benefit ratio of traditional HT is not ideal. Less potent plant-derived estrogens are relatively safe, but less effective. Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) provide both beneficial effects and adverse effects, but the ideal treatment has proven elusive, said J. Mark Cline, D.V.M., Ph.D., one of the co-authors.
The Wake Forest Baptist team worked in partnership with the pharmaceutical company Pfizer to explore a new strategy, termed a Tissue Selective Estrogen Combination (TSEC). Using this strategy, a conventional estrogen (CEE) was combined with a bone-protective SERM-like drug, bazedoxifene acetate (BZA), to produce a complementary pattern of tissue effects that maximize the benefits of HT while avoiding the risk. The study involved a 20-month randomized, parallel-arm trial – which has a comparison group and at least one new or active therapy group – in postmenopausal nonhuman primates, designed to determine the effect of TSEC treatment on the breast, uterus and cardiovascular system.
The TSEC strategy has been evaluated in the Selective estrogens, Menopause, And Response to Therapy (SMART) phase 3 trials involving more than 6,000 women. Cline said the Wake Forest Baptist nonhuman primate trials are important because they can address tissue responses directly, whereas studies in women use clinical outcomes that may require many years to provide conclusive results.
The Wake Forest Baptist findings are discussed in separate papers, both published recently in Menopause: The Journal of The North American Menopause Society.
Prior work by Cline in the 1990s demonstrated the adverse effect of a widely used estrogens and estrogen-progestin combination on the breast, a finding that was predictive of the breast cancer patterns later found in the Women's Health Initiative. In contrast to that finding, the TSEC strategy is anticipated to reduce breast cancer risk. "Remarkably, BZA overrides the adverse effects of CEE at the level of gene expression in the breast, suppressing abnormal tissue growth," Cline said.
Lead investigator Thomas B. Clarkson, D.V.M., is hopeful about the promise of this new approach. "The findings are encouraging for postmenopausal women," he said. "We believe that women can be given CEE along with BZA to protect against breast cancer and uterine cancer, without adversely affecting the cardiovascular system, but more research is necessary."
INFORMATION:
Other team members include: Kelly F. Ethun, D.V.M., Charles E. Wood, D.VM., Ph.D, Thomas C. Register, Ph.D, and Susan E. Appt, D.V.M., all of Wake Forest Baptist.
Wake Forest School of Medicine received an investigator-initiated grant to Clarkson from Pfizer to conduct the work described. Clarkson and Cline have been paid consultants for Pfizer. Appt is the principal investigator on a pending investigator-initiated proposal to Pfizer, related to further development of the TSEC approach.
END
CHESTNUT HILL, MA (Dec. 13, 2012) – A chemical nanostructure developed by Boston College researchers behaves much like the pores of the skin, serving as a precise control for a typically stubborn method of catalysis that is the workhorse of industrial chemistry.
Scientists have been trying to develop so-called yolk-shell catalysts as a means of imparting greater selectivity on heterogeneous catalysis, a process used in most industrial chemistry, including the manufacture of fine chemicals, petrochemicals and agrochemicals.
Boston College Assistant Professor of Chemistry ...
A recent lawsuit highlights the rights of workers when faced with a recent disability. In Boyton Beach, Fla., a man is suing his employer after being fired three days after revealing he was approved to be on the waiting list to undergo a kidney transplant. He had been employed for 10 years in his role as a night shift manager, making $72,000 a year.
The employee did not want to quit and claims that he could have worked 40 hours a week. A doctor recommended self-cleaning dialysis, which the lawsuit claimed the employee could do over his lunch break and would not require ...
A Texas company that underpaid mentally disabled workers for decades recently received several million-dollar judgments against them for violating the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, the Fair Labor Standards Act and several state labor laws for its treatment of its disabled employees.
Hill Country Farms, d.b.a. Henry's Turkey Service, illegally paid disabled workers a total of 41 cents per hour to eviscerate turkeys at an Iowa plant. The workers' rate of pay did not change in 30 years. Some of the workers had been working at the plant since the 1970s. The company ...
Dealing with the death of a loved one is hard enough without having to handle the court appearances, legal duties and other details of administering to the final wishes of family and friends regarding their estates and burials. A comprehensive, up-to-date estate plan can avoid many inheritance disputes and complications, helping to ease the transition. Unfortunately, many people die without a proper estate plan, even if they managed to create a will. Even if an estate plan is legally valid and clear, simply by its nature, handling estate and inheritance matters can be complicated ...
After divorce, many people would like nothing more than to never see their ex-spouses again. However, those who had children while married do not have that option. They have to learn to redefine their relationships with their former spouses so they can continue to raise their children together after divorce. People can follow some simple steps to make co-parenting more successful.
Focus on the Child
One thing that successful co-parents have in common is that they put their children first. They are able to set the issues they have with their ex-spouses aside in order ...
One of the many ways that Americans celebrate their holidays is by setting off fireworks. In the Hoosier State, it's no different. With New Years Eve almost here, it is important to make yourself aware of the laws surrounding fireworks, so you can have a safe holiday season and minimize the possibility of a fireworks personal injury claim.
Indiana fireworks law
Indiana counties have some ability to adopt ordinances that regulate the days and hours that consumer fireworks can be discharged. However, any ordinance adopted cannot restrict the use of fireworks during ...
In the past, people in their 50s, 60s or 70s were seeing an attorney to create a will or other estate plan. Now, a growing number of people in this age group are seeking an attorney because they want to get a divorce after decades of marriage. According to a Bowling Green State University Study, divorce among those aged 46 to 64 has increased by more than 50 percent in the past two years and this has greatly contributed to the divorce rate in the country.
Divorce stabilizing among other age groups
The Bowling Green study showed that divorce rates in the country are ...
Drunk drivers are recurrent menaces on Texas' roadways, responsible for 1,259 deaths and 42 percent of car accidents in 2010 alone. Those convicted of DWI face serious criminal penalties, fines and loss of freedoms. However, criminal penalties do not compensate the victim's family if the drunk driver kills someone. Fortunately, there is a legal remedy available to those whose loved ones have paid the ultimate price because of someone else's carelessness--wrongful death.
Wrongful death lawsuits are a common legal remedy for families who have lost relatives in drunk driving ...
Becoming a father is both an enormous blessing and a huge responsibility. The birth of a child brings one of the most loving and fulfilling relationships that most men will ever know. However, raising a child also means a huge commitment of both time and money. In addition to the ordinary costs of taking care of a child, a man who is not married to the child's mother will likely also have to make monthly child support payments.
Imagine, then, raising a child as your own only to find out that you are not the child's biological parent. The mother knew this all along, but ...
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie recently signed into law a new measure expanding state programs that allow some people convicted of nonviolent drug offenses to receive treatment through the state's drug court rather than spend time in prison. The measure has been praised as a way to help ease financial strain on the New Jersey prison system while providing services that are more effective at improving recovery rates and reducing recidivism.
Drug court programs have existed in New Jersey for over a decade, giving people convicted of certain drug crimes the opportunity ...