“…Although androgen is the main target when dealing with prostate cancer, Huggins and Hodges (1941) also showed that estrogen plays a role in prostate cancer progression. Some medicinal plant extracts ( P. africanum extract [Shenouda et al, 2007], soy milk digestion extract [Kang et al, 2016], B. chinensis extract [Thelen et al, 2007]), and compounds obtained from medicinal plants (bonediol [Moo‐Puc et al, 2015], quercetin, baicalein, apigenin, genistein, resveratrol, curcumin, epigallocatechin gallate [Shenouda et al, 2004], and GBA [Zhang, Kim, et al, 2012]) were able to interact with ER, either by reducing their expression or by directly binding to them. Their binding affinity could be compared with tamoxifen, a drug used in the management of breast cancer that also binds to ER (Sporn & Lippman, 2003), indicating their potential for future studies.…”