droloxifene has been researched along with 4-hydroxytoremifene* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for droloxifene and 4-hydroxytoremifene
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Synthesis and reactivity of potential toxic metabolites of tamoxifen analogues: droloxifene and toremifene o-quinones.
Tamoxifen remains the endocrine therapy of choice in the treatment of all stages of hormone-dependent breast cancer. However, tamoxifen has been shown to increase the risk of endometrial cancer which has stimulated research for new effective antiestrogens, such as droloxifene and toremifene. In this study, the potential for these compounds to cause cytotoxic effects was investigated. One potential cytotoxic mechanism could involve metabolism of droloxifene and toremifene to catechols, followed by oxidation to reactive o-quinones. Another cytotoxic pathway could involve the oxidation of 4-hydroxytoremifene to an electrophilic quinone methide. Comparison of the amounts of GSH conjugates formed from 4-hydroxytamoxifen, droloxifene, and 4-hydroxytoremifene suggested that 4-hydroxytoremifene is more effective at formation of a quinone methide. However, all three substrates formed similar amounts of o-quinones. Both the tamoxifen-o-quinone and toremifene-o-quinone reacted with deoxynucleosides to give corresponding adducts. However, the toremifene-o-quinone was shown to be considerably more reactive than the tamoxifen-o-quinone in terms of both kinetic data as well as the yield and type of deoxynucleoside adducts formed. Since thymidine formed the most abundant adducts with the toremifene-o-quinone, sufficient material was obtained for characterization by (1)H NMR, COSY-NMR, DEPT-NMR, and tandem mass spectrometry. Cytotoxicity studies with tamoxifen, droloxifene, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, 4-hydroxytoremifene, and their catechol metabolites were carried out in the human breast cancer cell lines S30 and MDA-MB-231. All of the metabolites tested showed cytotoxic effects that were similar to the parent antiestrogens which suggests that o-quinone formation from tamoxifen, droloxifene, and 4-hydroxytoremifene is unlikely to contribute to their cytotoxicity. However, the fact that the o-quinones formed adducts with deoxynucleosides in vitro implies that the o-quinone pathway might contribute to the genotoxicity of the antiestrogens in vivo. Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Benzoquinones; Breast Neoplasms; Cell Survival; Deoxyribonucleosides; DNA Adducts; Female; Glutathione; Indolequinones; Indoles; Microsomes, Liver; Quinones; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization; Tamoxifen; Toremifene; Tumor Cells, Cultured | 2001 |
Clastogenic and aneugenic effects of tamoxifen and some of its analogues in hepatocytes from dosed rats and in human lymphoblastoid cells transfected with human P450 cDNAs (MCL-5 cells).
Tamoxifen and its analogues 4-hydroxytamoxifen, toremifene, 4-hydroxytoremifene, clomifene and droloxifene were tested for clastogenic effects in a human lymphoblastoid cell line (MCL-5) expressing elevated native CYP1A1 and containing transfected CYP1A2, CYP2A6, CYP2E1 and CYP3A4 and epoxide hydrolase and in a cell line containing only the viral vector (Ho1). MCL-5 or Ho1 cells were incubated with 4-hydroxytamoxifen, 4-hydroxytoremifene, clomifene or droloxifene and the incidence of micronuclei estimated. With MCL-5 cells there was an increase in micronuclei with 4-hydroxytamoxifen, 4-hydroxytoremifene and clomifene but not with droloxifene. With Ho1 cells only 4-hydroxytamoxifen and 4-hydroxytoremifene caused an increase in micronuclei. MCL-5 cells were incubated with tamoxifen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, toremifene, droloxifene, clomifene or diethylstilbestrol (0.25-10 microg/ml) for 48 h and subjected to 3 h treatment with vinblastine (0.25 microg/ml) to arrest cells in metaphase. The incidence of cells with chromosomal numerical aberrations (aneuploidy) was increased in cells treated with tamoxifen, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, toremifene, clomifene and diethylstilbestrol but not droloxifene. The frequency of cells with structural abnormalities (excluding gaps) was increased in cells treated with tamoxifen and toremifene but not 4-hydroxytamoxifen, clomifene, droloxifene or diethylstilbestrol. The clastogenic activities of tamoxifen (35 mg/kg), toremifene (36.3 mg/kg), droloxifene (35.2 mg/kg) and diethylstilbestrol (25 mg/kg) were compared in groups of four female Wistar rats. Each chemical was dissolved in glycerol formal, administered as a single dose by gavage and hepatocytes isolated by collagenase perfusion 24 h later. The cells were cultured in the presence of epidermal growth factor (40 ng/ml) for 48 h, colchicine (10 microg/ml) being added for the final 3 h of incubation. At least 100 chromosomal spreads were examined from each animal for the presence of numerical and structural abnormalities. The incidences of aneuploidy following treatment were: tamoxifen 81%, toremifene 46%, droloxifene 9.6%, diethylstilbestrol 45.7%, vehicle control 5.3%. The incidences of chromosomal structural abnormalities excluding gaps were: tamoxifen 4.3%, toremifene 0.8%, droloxifene 0.5%, diethylstilbestrol 0.8%, control 0.5%. The incidence of chromosomal structural aberrations excluding gaps in the treated animals was not statistically significantly different from controls exce Topics: Aneuploidy; Animals; Anticarcinogenic Agents; Cell Line; Cell Nucleus; Clomiphene; Female; Humans; Liver; Lymphocytes; Micronucleus Tests; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Tamoxifen; Toremifene; Transfection | 1997 |