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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsBreakthrough in Breast Cancer Treatment: Singapore Researchers Lead Global Genetic Study on Tamoxifen
In a landmark publication today in npj Breast Cancer, a team of scientists spearheaded by researchers from Singapore's Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS) and National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) has unveiled critical genetic insights into how patients metabolize tamoxifen, a cornerstone therapy for hormone receptor-positive (HR+) breast cancer.
Breast cancer remains the most common cancer among women in Singapore, with incidence rates climbing to 62.33 per 100,000 women in 2023 from 41.58 in 1990, though mortality has dropped 23.4% thanks to earlier diagnoses and advanced treatments like tamoxifen.
What is Tamoxifen and Why Does Metabolism Matter?
Tamoxifen (full name: tamoxifen citrate) is a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) prescribed to over 70% of HR+ breast cancer patients worldwide. Once ingested, it undergoes extensive liver metabolism via cytochrome P450 enzymes, primarily CYP2D6, to form active metabolites like endoxifen (Z-endoxifen) and 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen. These metabolites, up to 100 times more potent than parent tamoxifen, bind to estrogen receptors (ERα) on cancer cells, halting proliferation.
However, metabolism varies widely: about 30-40% of variability in endoxifen levels stems from CYP2D6 genetic polymorphisms. Poor metabolizers (e.g., carrying *4 or *10 alleles) produce 50-80% less endoxifen, potentially leading to suboptimal therapy. In Asians, including Singaporeans, the *10 allele is prevalent (up to 50%), contrasting with *4 in Europeans (20-30%), highlighting the need for ancestry-specific insights.
Prior studies linked low endoxifen (<30 nM) to higher recurrence, but conflicting outcome data spurred this comprehensive GWAS.

Unpacking the Multi-Ancestry GWAS Design
The study pooled data from six cohorts: discovery phase included 636 patients on 20 mg daily tamoxifen for ≥8 weeks (280 Singapore Asians, 286 Germans, 70 Lebanese). Validation added 869 (262 UK POSH, 535 French PHACS, 72 Singapore NCC2003). Outcome analysis covered 1,326 non-metastatic HR+ patients (276 Singapore NCC0801, etc.).
- Genotyping: Illumina arrays, imputed to 1000 Genomes/gnomAD.
- Phenotyping: Steady-state serum Z-endoxifen via LC-MS/MS.
- Analysis: Linear regression on log-endoxifen, ancestry-adjusted (top 5 PCs), meta-analysis (P<5×10⁻⁸).
- CYP2D6: Activity scores per CPIC guidelines (poor: 0, intermediate: 0.25-1, normal: 1.25-2.25, ultra-rapid: >2.25).
This rigorous, cross-ancestry design addressed ethnic biases in prior European-focused research.
Key Discoveries: CYP2D6 Reigns Supreme, TCF20 Emerges
The GWAS pinpointed a genome-wide significant locus on chromosome 22q12.2, encompassing CYP2D6 and upstream TCF20 gene. Lead SNP rs932376 A>G (3 kb upstream TCF20, 70 kb upstream CYP2D6) associated with lower endoxifen (beta=-0.12, P=2.1×10⁻⁹ discovery; replicated in validation).
Multivariable models showed independence: CYP2D6 metabolizer status explained 91.2% endoxifen variance, rs932376 48.8%. Each G allele dropped endoxifen ~7.5 nM; poor metabolizers ~26 nM below normal.
No loci for 4-OH-tamoxifen; other CYPs/UGTs non-significant.

Singapore's Pivotal Role in Global Breast Cancer Research
Singapore punched above its weight: Lead author Dr. Chiea Chuen Khor (GIS, A*STAR) drove analysis; corresponding Dr. Balram Chowbay (NCCS/Duke-NUS) oversaw cohorts. Key contributors: Dr. Elaine Lim, Dr. Yoon Sim Yap (NCCS Division of Medical Oncology); Sylvia Chen lab (NCCS Clinical Pharmacology).
Singapore provided ~25% discovery cohort (Asian arm), validating findings in NCC0801/NCC2003 trials. GIS's genomic expertise, Duke-NUS's clinical integration, and NCCS's patient data fueled this. Prior Singapore work (e.g., CYP2D6*10 prevalence) contextualized Asian specifics.
This underscores Singapore's rising pharmacogenomics hub status amid rising breast cancer burden (lifetime risk ~5%).
Clinical Outcomes: No Direct Link, But Promise Remains
Despite pharmacokinetic ties, neither CYP2D6 status nor rs932376 linked to disease-free survival (DFS), recurrence-free survival (RFS), or distant RFS after adjustments (age, BMI, tumor grade/nodes). Trends hinted poorer RFS in poor metabolizers (P=0.088 univariate), but multivariable null.
Explanations: Outcomes multifactorial (adherence, comorbidities); endoxifen thresholds debated; larger studies needed. Still, genotyping could guide dose escalation for poor metabolizers, boosting endoxifen >30 nM.
Access the full study here for detailed survival curves.
Relevance for Singaporean Patients and Clinicians
In Singapore, where HR+ breast cancer predominates (~70% cases), tamoxifen suits premenopausal women or aromatase inhibitor-intolerant patients. Asian CYP2D6 profiles (few poor metabolizers, high *10) predict moderate endoxifen, but rs932376 (common across ancestries) adds nuance.
NCCS already pioneers pharmacogenomics; this bolsters calls for routine CYP2D6 testing (CPIC guidelines: consider alternatives for poor metabolizers). Cost-effective: genotyping ~S$200-500, potentially averting recurrence.
Local stats: ~3,000 new cases/year; tamoxifen cuts recurrence 40-50%. Integrating GWAS loci could refine risk models.
Future Horizons: Toward Tailored Therapies
Authors urge functional TCF20 studies (possible CYP2D6 regulator) and rare variant sequencing. Multi-ancestry PRS for endoxifen could personalize dosing. Singapore's precision oncology push (e.g., GIS-Duke-NUS pipelines) positions it lead trials.
- Expand to African/South Asian ancestries.
- Longitudinal endoxifen-outcome links with adherence data.
- Combine with AI for polygenic prediction.
Optimistic: Reduced variability could boost 5-year survival >95% for early HR+.
Photo by Mari Ganesh Kumar on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives and Broader Impacts
Oncologists hail multi-ancestry validation; patients gain hope for equitable care. Challenges: Implementation costs, equity in testing. Solutions: Subsidized genotyping via Medisave, NCCS integration.
Educates on pharmacogenomics: Step 1 genotype, Step 2 dose-adjust (e.g., 30-40mg for intermediates), Step 3 monitor levels.
Singapore's feat inspires regional collaboration, aligning with Healthier SG vision.
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