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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Serendipity
- Tamoxifen the early years - discovery (1950's)
- The developers of tamoxifen
- Tamoxifen the early years - effects, uses (1960's)
- New synthetic agent for the induction of ovulation
- The pharmacology and clinical uses of tamoxifen
- Tamoxifen as an ovulation inducing agent - 2000's
- Developing tamoxifen in 1972 - difficulties
- Tamoxifen effective in treating breast cancer
- The path for progress - the 3 P's
- Turning ICI 46474 into a breast cancer drug
- Academia and the pharmaceutical industry
- Tamoxifen the early years - reinvention (1970's)
- Tamoxifen - treatment and prevention principles
- Treatment strategies with tamoxifen
- Duration of administration
- Effects of early treatment with tamoxifen
- Treatment practice 2010
- Approvals and indications
- Patenting tamoxifen
- Reviewing the development of tamoxifen
- Patenting problems
- Conclusion
Topics Covered
- Tamoxifen is a pioneering medicine that was re-invented from it's original use because it failed as a contraceptive. Tamoxifen prevents the growth and development of breast cancer and is a pioneering medicine used to treat breast cancer. It is estimated that millions of women are alive today because of tamoxifen treatment. It is also the first medicine approved by the Food & Drug Administration for the prevention of any cancer.
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Talk Citation
Jordan, V.C. (2018, January 17). The quest for multi-functional medicines: path for progress: the tamoxifen story [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 22, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/IBWZ5209.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. V. Craig Jordan has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
The quest for multi-functional medicines: path for progress: the tamoxifen story
A selection of talks on Cancer
Transcript
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0:00
This is the first of two talks about
the non-steroidal antioestrogen tamoxifen and how it was developed,
and ultimately became the gold standard for
the treatment of breast cancer and the first chemopreventive.
The second lecture, will take us into
the development of the selective oestrogen receptor modulators,
agents that have been used for multiple diseases in women.
0:27
The discovery of the non-steroidal antioestrogens was really serendipity,
it was by accident.
These compounds were part of cardiovascular programs in the pharmaceutical industry,
but they failed in that application;
But it was found by a young scientist that these compounds had
antioestrogenic effects in target sites all over an animal's body;
But the important point was,
these were morning-after pills in animals.
If animals became pregnant, the next day,
administration of non-steroidal antioestrogens stopped the animals from becoming pregnant.
Ultimately, with the development of these compounds became their reinvention,
patenting and promotion of progress into therapeutics and chemoprevention.
1:14
So, how did this all begin?
Well, during the 1950s and the 1960s,
there was the discovery of a host of different non-steroidal antioestrogens.
They basically were anti-fertility agents, so they were tested
with their ability to be anti-fertility agents in women.
Now this was the 1960s,
this was an era of make love, not war,
and clinical trials were started with everybody getting very
excited about the possibility of these new occasional contraceptives.
One could go away for the weekend, Monday morning,
pop a few pills in, and everything would be just fine.
But unfortunately, exactly the opposite happened.
These compounds were inducers of ovulation, they stimulated ovulation.
So, these particular agents now went forward in a completely different direction.
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