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LeadDiscovery Reports
Estrogen receptors regulate pulmonary alveolus formation and estrogen is
required for alveolar architectural stability, and induces alveolar
regeneration in mice.
World-wide,
600 million people suffer from the chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD),
chronic obstructive bronchitis and emphysema, with some three million dying
from the diseases each year. COPD is caused by chronic respiratory
inflammation, proteolytic breakdown of airway tissue and consequent loss of
elastic recoil in the lungs.
This serious healthcare problem is paralleled by global sales of around US$2.8
billion which will increase in value significantly over the next decade. This
will be driven by the aging population and the approval of marketed asthma
products for the treatment of COPD. For example, Advair and Symbicort (both
inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting beta2-agonist combinations) were initially
approved as asthma therapeutics but were used off-label for the treatment of
COPD. However both of these have now been approved for the treatment of COPD
which will see prescribing rates rise above off-label levels. This together
with new product launches, including Boehringer Ingelheim's Spiriva will see
the market value rise to at least $5.5 billion by 2011. Spiriva (tiotropium
bromide), the first specific drug for COPD, is co-marketed by Pfizer.
Approximately 50% of the 30 million COPD patients in the seven major markets
are undiagnosed however the increased awareness accompanying Pfizer's entry
into the COPD arena is expected to help overcome low diagnosis rates and is
seen by analysts as pathway to unlocking the true COPD patient potential. This
offers a further reason for the expected expansion in the COPD market (for a
full analysis of the COPD market click here).
Following several successful drug launches to the respiratory market in the
past five years, companies are seeking the next blockbuster drug in a high
potential market. Multiple potential treatment pathways, an enormous patient
population, and a relatively high level of unmet need in COPD have promoted a
deep respiratory pipeline. However, among over 70 products in Phase I
development or later, only a handful are in Phase III or registration phases
of development (for an evaluation of emerging treatments of COPD click here).
PDE-4 inhibitors are anticipated to be the next novel drug class to reach the
respiratory market, with the launch of Altana's Daxas (roflumilast) expected
over the next two years, but the superiority of Spiriva will likely lead to
these 'second-to-market' drugs battling for market share with xanthines and
other add-on therapies.
With a number of novel therapies showing disappointing results, there remains
a particular need to develop drugs that control the underlying inflammatory
and destructive processes that cause COPD as no currently available drug
therapy reduces the relentless progression of COPD. In contrast to the
enormous advances made in asthma management little significant progress has
been made in COPD therapeutics. In particular while headway is being made in
the development of anti-inflammatory agents that would be expected to slow
disease progression few strategies have been identified that may reverse
airway damage. The target that has received the greatest attention in this
respect is the retinoic acid receptor. Retinoic acid increases the number of
alveoli in developing rats and, remarkably, reverses the histological and
physiological changes induced by elastase treatment of adult rats (this is one
model that has been used in the study of COPD). Despite these promising data
other studies employing alternative models have been less encouraging and the
search for airway remodeling agents for use in COPD continues.
One particularly interesting report appears in August's edition of the
American Journal of Cellular & Molecular Physiology. In this report Massaro &
Massaro from Georgetown University School of Medicine report that the estrogen
receptor may represent a molecular target for future COPD therapeutics. It has
been previously shown that ovariectomy in sexually immature rats diminishes
the formation of alveoli a phenomenon prevented by estrogen. This suggests
that estrogen may play a role in alveolar development. The Georgetown group
demonstrate that estrogen receptor alpha and estrogen receptor beta, the only
recognized mammalian estrogen receptors, are both required for the formation
of a full complement of alveoli in female mice. In addition to playing a role
in alveolar formation estrogen receptor beta also contributes to lung elastic
tissue recoil. Mirroring these observations, ovariectomy in adult mice
produces a rapid loss of alveoli and of alveolar surface area. This phenomenon
is reversed by estrogen replacement.
This important study reveals that estrogen receptors regulate alveolar size
and number as well as airway elasticity in a non-redundant manner and that
estrogen is required for maintenance of already formed alveoli. Furthermore
estrogen can induce alveolar regeneration following ovariectomy in adult mice.
It is generally accepted that lung function diminishes with age and that
smoking accelerates this decline providing the underlying cause of COPD. It
has however been observed that some individuals are much more susceptible to
the development of COPD than others. Of interest a second paper published this
year reports that women may be more predisposed to develop COPD than men.
Women also develop emphysema or other types of COPD at an earlier age than men
and experience a greater degree of lung damage than men do from smoking the
same number of cigarettes. The reasons for this gender difference are not
clear but may be due to women having smaller airway. In addition, the findings
of the present study suggest the involvement of hormonal status in the
susceptibility to COPD. Perhaps more importantly the study suggests that
therapeutic agents that activate the estrogen receptor may limit the
development of COPD or even reverse damage.
Considerable attention is currently being paid to identifying novel routes of
administration for a wide variety of therapeutics. One class of drug for which
different routes of administration have been evaluated is the hormone
replacement therapies. For example, a number of transdermal hormonal
replacement therapies have been developed. Like transdermal administration,
interest in inhaled therapeutics is also growing and of particular relevence
to the data coming out of Georgetown University EstroLast was under
development by Alkermes as an estrogen-based hormonal replacement therapy. The
active compound of this technology was delivered using Alkermes' airway drug
delivery sytem. The results of the present study suggest that this approach to
hormone replacement therapy may gain significant interest as awareness of
accelerated COPD as a possible effect of menopause becomes clearer.
Entry date
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Adapted from Massaro & Massaro,
J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2004 Aug 6 [Epub ahead of print]
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