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Featured researches published by R. De Coster.


Calcified Tissue International | 1996

Aromatization of androgens is important for skeletal maintenance of aged male rats

Dirk Vanderschueren; E Van Herck; R. De Coster; Roger Bouillon

A nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor vorozole (VOR) was administered to aged (12 months old) male Wistar rats and its effect was compared with the effect of androgen deficiency. The rats were either sham-operated (SHAM) or orchidectomized (ORCH) and treated with or without VOR. Thus, four experimental groups were created (SHAM, ORCH, SHAM + VOR, ORCH + VOR). The follow-up period was 4 months. At the end of the experimental period, bone mineral density (BMD) of the first four lumbar vertebrae and right femur was measured ex vivo with dualenergy X-ray absorptiometry, bone formation was evaluated by serum osteocalcin, and bone resorption by urinary excretion of (deoxy)pyridinoline. Orchidectomy increased bone resorption 2-to 3-fold whereas bone formation was only slightly increased. Treatment of intact male rats with VOR also increased bone resorption (+30% increase) whereas bone formation was not increased in this SHAM + VOR group. Their BMD was 7% lower in the femur (P < 0.01) and 6% lower in the lumbar vertebrae (P < 0.01) compared with the SHAM group that had not received VOR. Moreover, this decrease of bone mineral density was not significantly different from the expected decrease of bone density observed in the ORCH groups (6–10%). This was also reflected by a decrease of calcium content of the first four lumbar vertebrae of 15% (P < 0.001) in the SHAM + VOR group and 9–14% (P < 0.05) in the ORCH groups compared with the SHAM group, respectively. These data therefore suggest that inhibition of aromatization of androgens into estrogens increases bone resorption and bone loss similar to that observed after complete removal of androgens. Aromatization of androgens into estrogens may therefore, at least partly, explain the effects of androgens on skeletal maintenance.


Journal of Steroid Biochemistry | 1989

R 76713, a new specific non-steroidal aromatase inhibitor

W. Wouters; R. De Coster; M. Krekels; J. van Dun; D. Beerens; C. Haelterman; Alfons Herman Margaretha Raeymaekers; Eddy Jean Edgard Freyne; J. Van Gelder; Marc Gaston Venet; Paul A. J. Janssen

The effects of R 76713, a new triazole derivative, on rat ovarian, testicular and adrenal steroidogenesis were investigated both in vitro and in vivo. In vitro R 76713 is a very potent inhibitor of the aromatase enzyme in rat granulosa cells, showing an IC50-value of 3.0 +/- 0.2 nM. The compound is about 1000 times more active than aminoglutethimide which shows an IC50-value of 3900 +/- 2800 nM in the same system. R 76713 is also a highly selective aromatase inhibitor. In cultures of ovarian, testicular and adrenal cells, formation of progesterone, androgens and glucocorticoids was only affected by drug concentrations higher than 1 microM. In vivo, single oral drug doses of 0.05 mg/kg lowered plasma estradiol levels of PMSG-primed female rats by more than 90%. An ED50-value of 0.005 mg/kg could be calculated. A single oral dose of 1 mg/kg suppressed plasma estradiol levels almost completely for 24 h. A dose of 0.1 mg/kg lowered plasma estradiol by more than 90% for 8 h. In vivo, R 76713 also showed a highly selective profile. In LHRH/ACTH-injected rats, plasma levels of testicular and adrenal steroids remained unchanged after administration of a drug dose of 20 mg/kg. R 76713 at drug concentrations of 10 microM, showed no interaction in vitro with estrogen-, progestin-, androgen- and glucocorticoid-receptors. Given orally at 20 mg/kg for 3 days the compound also showed no estrogen or androgen agonistic or antagonistic effects.


Bone | 2000

Skeletal effects of estrogen deficiency as induced by an aromatase inhibitor in an aged male rat model.

Dirk Vanderschueren; Steven Boonen; A. G. H. Ederveen; R. De Coster; E Van Herck; Karen Moermans; Liesbeth Vandenput; Annemieke Verstuyf; Roger Bouillon

Aromatization of androgens into estrogens may be important for maintenance of the male skeleton. To address this hypothesis, we evaluated the skeletal effects of selective estrogen deficiency as induced by the aromatase inhibitor vorozole (Vor), with or without 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) administration (1.35 microg/day), in aged (12-month-old) male rats. A baseline group was killed at the start of the experiment (Base). The control group (Control), the group treated with vorozole alone (Vor), the group treated with E(2) alone (E(2)), or the group with a combination of both (Vor + E(2)) were killed 15 weeks later. Vorozole significantly increased serum testosterone (T) and reduced serum E(2) compared with Control. Body weight gain and serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) were also lower in Vor, whereas significant weight loss and decrease of serum IGF-I occurred as a result of E(2) administration. Bone formation as assessed by serum osteocalcin was unaffected but osteoid surface in the proximal metaphysis of the tibia was increased in Vor-treated rats. Bone resorption as evaluated by urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion was increased in Vor. Biochemical parameters of bone turnover were reduced significantly in all E(2) treated rats. Premature closure of the growth plates and decreased osteoid and mineralizing surfaces were also observed in E(2) and Vor + E(2). Apparent bone density of lumbar vertebrae and femur, as measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), was significantly reduced in Vor. Vorozole decreased femoral bone density mainly in the distal femur (trabecular and cortical region). This decrease of bone density was not present in E(2) and Vor + E(2). Similar findings were observed when bone density was assessed by peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT); that is, trabecular density of the distal femur, the proximal tibia, and the distal lumbar vertebra were all lower in Vor. This decrease in density was not observed in all E(2)-treated animals. In conclusion, administration of the aromatase inhibitor, vorozole, to aged male rats induces net trabecular bone loss in both the appendicular and axial skeleton, despite a concomitant increase in serum testosterone. E(2) administration is able to prevent this trabecular bone loss in vorozole-treated animals.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1996

P450-dependent enzymes as targets for prostate cancer therapy

R. De Coster; Walter Wouters; J. Bruynseels

Metastatic prostate adenocarcinoma is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths among men. First line treatment is primarily aimed at blocking the synthesis and action of androgens. As primary endocrine treatment, androgen deprivation is usually achieved by orchidectomy or LHRH analogues, frequently combined with androgen receptor antagonists in order to block the residual adrenal androgens. However, nearly all the patients will eventually relapse. Available or potential second line therapies include, among others, alternative endocrine manipulations and chemotherapy. Cytochrome P450-dependent enzymes are involved in the synthesis and/or degradation of many endogenous compounds, such as steroids and retinoic acid. Some of these enzymes represent suitable targets for the treatment of prostate cancer. In first line therapy, inhibitors of the P450-dependent 17,20-lyase may achieve a maximal androgen ablation with a single drug treatment. Ketoconazole at high dose blocks both testicular and adrenal androgen biosynthesis but its side-effects, mainly gastric discomfort, limit its widespread use. A series of newly synthesized, more selective, steroidal 17,20-lyase inhibitors related to 17-(3-pyridyl)androsta-5,16-dien-3beta-ol, may open new perspectives in this field. In prostate cancer patients who relapse after surgical or medical castration, therapies aiming at suppressing the remaining adrenal androgen biosynthesis (ketoconazole) or producing a medical adrenalectomy (aminoglutethimide+hydrocortisone) have been used, but are becoming obsolete with the generalization of maximal androgen blockade in first line treatment. The role of inhibition of aromatase in prostate cancer therapy, which was postulated for aminoglutethimide, could not be confirmed by the use of more selective aromatase inhibitors, such as formestane. An alternative approach is represented by liarozole fumarate (LIA), a compound that blocks the P450-dependent catabolism of retinoic acid (RA). In vitro, it enhances the antiproliferative and differentiation effects of RA in cell lines that express RA metabolism, such as F9 teratocarcinoma and MCF-7 breast carcinoma cells. In vivo, monotherapy with LIA increases RA plasma levels and, to a greater extent, endogenous tissue RA levels leading to retinoid-mimetic effects. In the rat Dunning prostate cancer models, it inhibits the growth of androgen-independent as well as androgen-dependent carcinomas relapsing after castration. Concurrently, changes in the pattern of cytokeratins characteristic of increased differentiation were observed. Early clinical trials show that LIA, in second or third line therapy in metastatic prostate cancer, induces PSA responses in about 30% of unselected patients. In some patients regression of soft tissue metastasis ha been observed. In a subgroup of patients, an important relief of metastatic bone pain was also noted.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1990

New non-steroidal aromatase inhibitors: Focus on R76713

R. De Coster; Walter Wouters; Charlie Bowden; H. Vanden Bossche; J. Bruynseels; R.W. Tuman; R. Van Ginckel; Eric Snoeck; A. Van Peer; Paul A. J. Janssen

R76713 is a novel triazole derivative which selectively blocks the cytochrome P450-dependent aromatase. In human placental microsomes, in FSH-stimulated rat and human granulosa cells and in human adipose stromal cells, 50% inhibition of estradiol biosynthesis was obtained at drug concentrations of 2-10 nM. In PMSG-injected female rats, R76713 lowered plasma estradiol levels by 50 and 90% 2 h after single oral doses of 0.005 and 0.05 mg/kg respectively. After 1 mg/kg, estradiol levels were suppressed by 90% for 16 h. In male cynomolgus monkeys, R76713 dose-dependently (0.03-10 micrograms/kg) inhibited peripheral aromatization with an ED50 of 0.13 microgram/kg without altering metabolic clearance rates and conversion ratios. In vitro R76713 had no effect on other P450-dependent steroidogenic enzymes up to 1000 nM at least. In rats, LHRH-, ACTH- and sodium-deprived diet stimulated plasma testosterone, corticosterone and aldosterone levels were not modified 2 h after single oral administrations of R76713 (up to 20 mg/kg). Furthermore, R76713 did not show any in vitro or in vivo estrogenic or antiestrogenic property. R76713 also induced regression of DMBA-induced mammary tumors after daily oral administration of 1 mg/kg b.i.d. In male volunteers (n = 4), a single oral dose of 5 and 10 mg lowered median plasma estradiol levels from 70 pM to the detection limit of the assay (40 pM) 4, 8 and 24 h after intake whereas no changes were detected after placebo administration. In premenopausal women (n = 15), receiving a single oral dose of 20 mg, median plasma estradiol levels decreased from 389 pM (before) to 168, 133 and 147 pM, 4, 8 and 24 h after intake whereas they remained above 420 pM after placebo (n = 7).


Mycoses | 1989

Toxicological Profile and Safety Evaluation of Antifungal Azole Derivatives

H. Van Cauteren; Ann Lampo; J. Vandenberghe; Ph. Vanparys; W. Coussement; R. De Coster; R. Marsboom

Summary: For the development of new sys‐temically acting, oral antifungal azoles, it is of key importance to compare them with ketoconazole, the first available drug in this therapeutic class.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1992

Experimental studies with liarozole (R 75,251): an antitumoral agent which inhibits retinoic acid breakdown.

R. De Coster; Walter Wouters; R. Van Ginckel; David William End; M. Krekels; M.-C. Coene; Charlie Bowden

Liarozole reduced tumor growth in the androgen-dependent Dunning-G and the androgen-independent Dunning MatLu rat prostate carcinoma models as well as in patients with metastatic prostate cancer who had relapsed after orchiectomy. In vitro, liarozole did not have cytostatic properties, as measured by cell proliferation in breast MCF-7 and prostate DU145 and LNCaP carcinoma cell lines. It did not alter the metabolism of labeled testosterone i.e. the 5 alpha-reductase in cultured rat prostatic cells. In mouse F9 teratocarcinoma cells liarozole did not show any retinoid-like properties but enhanced the plasminogen activator production induced by retinoic acid. Furthermore, liarozole and retinoic acid similarly reduced the growth of the androgen-dependent Dunning-G tumor in nude mice and inhibited tumor promotion elicited by phorbol ester in mouse skin. These data have raised the hypothesis that the antitumoral properties of liarozole may be related to inhibition of retinoic acid degradation, catalyzed by a P-450-dependent enzyme that is blocked by the drug.


Journal of Steroid Biochemistry | 1989

Aromatase inhibition by R 76713: Experimental and clinical pharmacology☆

Walter Wouters; R. De Coster; R.W. Tuman; Charlie Bowden; J. Bruynseets; H. Vanderpas; P. Van Rooy; Willem K. Amery; Paul A. J. Janssen

R 76713 is a new non-steroidal compound which inhibits aromatase in vitro and in vivo with a potency of at least 1000-fold that of aminoglutethimide. In male cynomolgus monkeys peripheral conversion of labeled androstenedione to estrone is decreased by 85%, 4-5 h after a single intravenous dose of 0.003 mg/kg of R 76713, without altering steroid metabolic clearance rates. In rats fed a sodium-depleted diet for 3 weeks, plasma levels of aldosterone and plasma renin activity remain unchanged 2 h after a single oral dose of up to 20 mg/kg of R 76713. This confirms previous data on the selectivity of R 76713 for aromatase inhibition as compared to inhibition of other enzymes involved in steroid biosynthesis. In male volunteers, a single oral dose of 5 or 10 mg of R 76713 lowers median plasma estradiol levels from 70 pM to the detection limit of the assay (30 pM) 4 and 8 h after intake, whereas no important changes are detected after placebo administration. In 15 premenopausal female volunteers receiving a single oral dose of 20 mg of R 76713, mean plasma estradiol levels decrease from 415 pM (before) to 179, 149 and 185 pM respectively 4, 8 and 24 h after intake whereas they remain above 380 pM after placebo (n = 7).


European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1985

Effect of a single administration of ketoconazole on total and physiologically free plasma testosterone and 17β-oestradiol levels in healthy male volunteers

R. De Coster; Ivo Caers; C. Haelterman; M. Debroye

SummaryThe effect of a single oral dose of 400 mg ketoconazole, given as an 80 mg/ml suspension, on total and physiologically free (i.e. non-sex hormonebound) testosterone and 17β-oestradiol has been investigated in 6 healthy male volunteers. The two steroids fell to nadir levels of 18 and 60% of their respective initial concentrations 6 hours after drug intake, and then completely recovered. Although in vitro slight displacement of testosterone from the sex-hormone binding globulin, by high doses of ketoconazole was found, the physiologically free concentration of testosterone in vivo was closely correlated with that of the total hormone, suggesting that there is no direct interference with sex-hormone binding globulin in vivo. Plasma LH and FSH were not significantly modified by treatment. The effect of ketoconazole on plasma oestradiol levels was less pronounced and was not clearly related to a block of the aromatase system, as reported in vitro.


The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 1991

Aromatase in the human choriocarcinoma JEG-3: Inhibition by R 76 713 in cultured cells and in tumors grown in nude mice

M. Krekels; Walter Wouters; R. De Coster; R. Van Ginckel; A. Leonaers; Paul A. J. Janssen

The aromatase enzyme and its inhibition by R 76 713 were characterized in the JEG-3 choriocarcinoma cell line in culture and in JEG-3 tumors grown in nude mice. Optimal cell culture parameters and enzyme reaction conditions for the determination of aromatase activity were established. Under these conditions, in vitro JEG-3 aromatase was inhibited by R 76 713 with IC50-values of 7.6 +/- 0.5 nM and 2.7 +/- 1.1 nM using 500 nM of androstenedione and testosterone as substrate respectively. The Km-value of the aromatase enzyme with androstenedione as substrate was 62 +/- 19 nM; with testosterone as substrate, a value of 166 +/- 27 nM was found. In the presence of increasing concentrations of R 76 713, the Km-values increased while the Vmax remained unchanged. Using androstenedione and testosterone as substrate Lineweaver-Burk analysis of the data showed Ki-values for R 76 713 of 0.43 +/- 0.06 nM and 0.47 +/- 0.39 nM respectively. R 76 713 appeared to competitively inhibit the JEG-3 aromatase. Aromatase could easily be measured in homogenates of JEG-3 tumors grown in nude mice and showed Km-values similar to those found for JEG-3 cells in vitro. IC50-values for inhibition of tumor aromatase by R 76 713 were also similar to those found in cultured cells. Tumor aromatase measured ex vivo, 2 h after a single oral administration of R 76 713 was dose-dependently inhibited. An ED50-value of 0.05 mg/kg was calculated. The JEG-3 choriocarcinoma proved to be a useful aromatase model enabling the comparative study of aromatase inhibition in vitro and in vivo.

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