Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.10.3.1 (tyrosinase)
9,065 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors investigated a group of 51 patients (29 men and 22 women) with intraocular melanoma: 41 patients with melanoma of the chorioid, 10 patients with melanoma of the ciliary body. They evaluated the clinical and pathological finding according to the TNM classification recommended by UICC (International Union Against Cancer). In all investigated patients they assessed circulating tumour cells (melanocytes) in the peripheral blood stream based on the detection of mRNA tyrosinase and marker MART 1. When evaluating the presence of markers according to the diagnosis irrespective of time, they found in patients in the clinical stage of T2 choroidal melanoma a 19% positivity of different markers and very rare a concurrent positivity of both markers. Patients in the clinical stage T3 had a 51% positivity of one marker and 34% concurrent positivity of both markers. In melanoma of the ciliary body evidence of individual markers was positive in 17% and only in 11% both markers were positive concurrently. On comparison of therapeutic procedures from the aspect of development in time in patients treated by brachytherapy only rare positivity was found at the time of administration the radioactive plaque, following an eight-month interval after brachytherapy the positivity of markers increased to 28%. On evaluation of markers of choroidal melanoma and ciliary body melanoma resolved by enucleation had their positivity at the time of operation was 36%, and during check-ups up to one year or longer it persisted at similar levels. Concurrent presence of both markers before this operation was rare, during postoperative check-up examinations it was within a range of 23 and 33%. The presence of both markers was repeatedly proved in five patients with chooidal melanoma after enucleation of the eye, in four of them in direct correlation with a metastatic process.
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PMID:[Detection of tumor circulating cells in patients with ocular melanoma]. 1218 79

Primary sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas are uncommon tumors that are frequently misclassified, resulting in inappropriate clinical management. A total of 115 cases of sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanoma included 59 females and 56 males, 13-93 years of age (mean 64.3 years). Patients presented most frequently with epistaxis (n = 52), mass (n = 42), and/or nasal obstruction (n = 34) present for a mean of 8.2 months. The majority of tumors involved the nasal cavity (n = 34), septum alone, or a combination of the nasal cavity and sinuses (n = 39) with a mean size of 2.4 cm. Histologically, the tumors were composed of a variety of cell types (epithelioid, spindled, undifferentiated), frequently arranged in a peritheliomatous distribution (n = 39). Immunohistochemical studies confirmed the diagnosis of sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas with positive reactions for S-100 protein, tyrosinase, HMB-45, melan A, and microphthalmia transcription factor. Sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas need to be considered in the differential diagnosis of most sinonasal malignancies, particularly carcinoma, lymphoma, sarcoma, and olfactory neuroblastoma. Surgery accompanied by radiation and/or chemotherapy was generally used. The majority of patients developed a recurrence (n = 79), with 75 patients dying with disseminated disease (mean 2.3 years), whereas 40 patients are either alive or had died of unrelated causes (mean 13.9 years). A TNM-type classification separated by anatomic site of involvement and metastatic disease is proposed to predict biologic behavior.
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PMID:Sinonasal tract and nasopharyngeal melanomas: a clinicopathologic study of 115 cases with a proposed staging system. 1271 45