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An Electrochemical Outlook on Tamoxifen Biotransformation: Current and Future Prospects
Author(s) -
Jorge Garrido,
E. Manuela Garrido,
Ana Maria OliveiraBrett,
Fernanda Borges
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
current drug metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.667
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1875-5453
pISSN - 1389-2002
DOI - 10.2174/138920011795202965
Subject(s) - biotransformation , tamoxifen , current (fluid) , medicine , biochemical engineering , chemistry , engineering , biochemistry , electrical engineering , cancer , breast cancer , enzyme
Tamoxifen is a nonsteroidal antiestrogen that is currently and widely used in the treatment of breast cancer in all of its stages, in adjuvant therapy as a long-term suppressant of tumor recurrence and also as a chemopreventive agent in women that are in high risk of developing this type of estrogen-dependent cancer. From a toxicological and (bio)analytical point of view the knowledge of the metabolic pathways of a drug is found to be extremely important. So, in the present work the most important tamoxifen biotransformation steps were reviewed in the light of recent pharmacological data. This overview also includes the current controversy concerning tamoxifen DNA-damaging (genotoxic) versus non-genotoxic mechanisms. A special focus will be given to the putative application of electrochemical methods as a modern and reliable analytical tool for determination of tamoxifen and its metabolites. Moreover, the potential of DNA electrochemical sensors for detection of structural damage to DNA as a basis for toxicity screening is highlighted. Future prospects looking for the importance of developing new analytical methodologies are also discussed.

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