Abstract
Progression of early-stage breast cancer to advanced-stage metastatic disease represents a major cause of death in women. Long-term conventional and targeted therapy for breast cancer includes multi-drug combinations of cytotoxic chemotherapeutics and pathway-selective small molecule inhibitors. These treatment options are frequently associated with systemic toxicity, intrinsic/acquired therapy resistance and emergence of a drug-resistant cancer stem cell population. This stem cell population has a chemo-resistant, cancer-initiating, premalignant phenotype that is accompanied by cellular plasticity and metastatic potential. These limitations emphasize an unmet need to identify testable alternatives against therapy-resistant metastatic breast cancer. Natural products such as dietary phytochemicals, nutritional herbs and their constitutive bioactive agents have documented human consumption, and lack detectable systemic toxicity and resultant off-target unfavorable side effects. Because of these advantages, natural products may represent testable alternatives for therapy-resistant breast cancer. The present review discusses published evidence for growth inhibitory efficacy of natural products on cellular models for molecular subtypes of clinical breast cancer and development of drug-resistant stem cell models. Collectively, this evidence validates mechanism-based experimental approaches to screen and prioritize efficacious bioactive agents from natural products as novel drug candidates that may function as therapeutic alternatives for breast cancer.
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