Abstract

Resistance to endocrine therapy remains a clinical challenge in the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer. We investigated if adding a traditional Asian herbal mixture consisting of 12 herbs, called Jaeumkanghwa-tang (JEKHT), to tamoxifen (TAM) therapy might prevent resistance and recurrence in the ER+ breast cancer model of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-exposed Sprague–Dawley rats. Rats were divided into four groups treated as follows: 15 mg/kg TAM administered via diet as TAM citrate (TAM only); 500 mg/kg JEKHT administered via drinking water (JEKHT only group); TAM + JEKHT and no treatment control group. The study was replicated using two different batches of JEKHT. In both studies, a significantly higher proportion of ER+ mammary tumors responded to TAM if animals also were treated with JEKHT (experiment 1: 47% vs 65%, P = 0.015; experiment 2: 43% vs 77%, P < 0.001). The risk of local recurrence also was reduced (31% vs 12%, P = 0.002). JEKHT alone was mostly ineffective. In addition, JEKHT prevented the development of premalignant endometrial lesions in TAM-treated rats (20% in TAM only vs 0% in TAM + JEKHT). Co-treatment of antiestrogen-resistant LCC9 human breast cancer cells with 1.6 mg/mL JEKHT reversed their TAM resistance in dose–response studies in vitro. Several traditional herbal medicine preparations can exhibit anti-inflammatory properties and may increase anti-tumor immune activities in the tumor microenvironment. In the tumors of rats treated with both JEKHT and TAM, expression of Il-6 (P = 0.03), Foxp3/T regulatory cell (Treg) marker (P = 0.033) and Tgfβ1 that activates Tregs (P < 0.001) were significantly downregulated compared with TAM only group. These findings indicate that JEKHT may prevent TAM-induced evasion of tumor immune responses.

Highlights

  • Medicine practiced in Asian countries can be a mixture of traditional Asian and modern Western medicine

  • Adding 500 mg/kg body weight JEKHT via drinking water to the treatment regimen increased the response rate to 65% and reduced the de novo resistance rate to 22%

  • 120 mg/kg body weight JEKHT inhibited the growth of HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells in mice (Kim et al 2015), and 200 or 400 mg/kg body weight JEKHT prevented the development of benign prostatic hyperplasia in rats (Shin et al 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Medicine practiced in Asian countries can be a mixture of traditional Asian and modern Western medicine. Herbs are commonly taken by Asian cancer patients to reduce the side effects of Western treatments, such as radiation and chemotherapy, and to improve well-being (Fouladbakhsh et al 2013). In a cross-sectional survey done among 1498 cancer patients in the United Kingdom, 22.7% of predominantly white breast cancer patients reported using herbal supplements (Damery et al 2011). Among Western patients herbal preparations are used

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