Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.23.5 (
cathepsin D
)
4,130
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Factors reflecting two major aspects of tumour biology, invasion (urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), plasminogen activator inhibiter (PAI-1),
cathepsin D
) and proliferation (S-phase fraction (SPF), Ki-67, p53, HER-2/neu), were assessed in 125 node-negative breast cancer patients without adjuvant systemic therapy. Median follow-up time was 76 months. Antigen levels of uPA, PAI-1 and
cathepsin D
were immunoenzymatically determined in tumour tissue extracts. SPF and ploidy were determined flow-cytometrically, Ki"'-67, p53, and HER-2/neu immunohistochemically in adjacent paraffin sections. Their prognostic impact on disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS) was compared to that of traditional factors (tumour size, grading, hormone receptor status). Univariate analysis determined PAI-1 (P < 0.001), uPA (P = 0.008),
cathepsin D
(P = 0.004) and SPF (P = 0.023) as significant for DFS. All other factors failed to be of significant prognostic value. In a Cox model, only PAI-1 was significant for DFS (P < 0.001, relative risk (RR) 6.2). In
CART
analysis for DFS, the combination of PAI-1 and uPA gave the best risk group discrimination. For OS, PAI-1,
cathepsin D
, tumour size and ploidy were statistically significant in univariate, but PAI-1 was the only independently significant factor in Cox analysis (P < 0.001, RR 8.9). In particular, this analysis shows that PAI-1 is still a strong and independent prognostic factor in node-negative breast cancer after extended 6-year median follow-up.
...
PMID:Risk-group discrimination in node-negative breast cancer using invasion and proliferation markers: 6-year median follow-up. 1040 48
In 1991, our group was the first to report the prognostic strength of plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) in primary breast cancer. The prognostic impact of invasion markers PAI-1 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) on disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) in breast cancer has since been independently confirmed. We now report on the prognostic impact of PAI-1 and uPA after long-term median follow-up of 77 months for our cohort (n = 316). Levels of uPA, PAI-1, and
cathepsin D
were determined in tumor tissue extracts by immunoenzymatic methods. S-phase fraction (SPF) was measured flowcytometrically in paraffin sections. Using log-rank statistics, optimized cutoffs were found for PAI-1 (14 ng/mg), uPA (3 ng/mg),
cathepsin D
(41 pmol/mg), and SPF (6%). In all patients, various factors (PAI-1, uPA, nodal status, SPF,
cathepsin D
, grading, tumor size, hormone receptor status) showed significant univariate impact on DFS. In Cox analysis, only nodal status (p < 0.001, RR: 3.1) and PAI-1 (p < 0.001, RR: 2.7) remained significant. In node-negative patients (n = 147), PAI-1, uPA, and SPF had significant univariate impact on DFS, whereas in Cox analysis, only PAI-1 was significant. PAI-1 was also significant for DFS within subgroups defined by established factors. In
CART
analysis, uPA enhanced the prognostic value of PAT-1 and nodal status for determination of a very-low-risk subgroup. For OS, only lymph node status and PAI-1 were significant in multivariate analysis. PAI-1 levels in the primary tumor were also a significant prognostic marker for survival after first relapse in both univariate and multivariate analysis.
...
PMID:Invasion marker PAI-1 remains a strong prognostic factor after long-term follow-up both for primary breast cancer and following first relapse. 1042 5
After long-term follow-up, the prognostic impact of the following proteolytic factors associated with tumor invasion and metastasis was evaluated in 276 primary breast cancer patients: uPA (urokinase-type plasminogen activator), PAI-1 (uPA inhibitor type 1), and cathepsins B, D and L. The median follow-up of patients still alive at the time of analysis was 109 months. To date 119 patients (43%) have relapsed and 117 (42%) have died. Antigen levels of uPA and PAI-1 were determined by ELISA in detergent extracts; cathepsin B, D, and L content was determined in cytosol fractions of the primary tumor:
cathepsin D
by ELSA and cathepsin B and L by ELISA. In multivariate analysis (Cox model) for disease-free survival (DFS), lymph node status (p < 0.001; RR = 3.8), cathepsin L (p < 0.001; RR = 2.6) and PAI-1 (p = 0.027; RR = 1.7) were significant factors in all patients. In addition to these factors, grading was significant for overall survival (OS). In another multivariate approach,
CART
(Classification And Regression Trees) analysis, lymph node status (p < 0.001) turned out to be the strongest discriminator for patients at high risk of relapse. In the node-negative patient subset, PAI-1 was the strongest risk group discriminator (p < 0.001): in this subset, patients with low levels of both PAI-1 and
cathepsin D
had a very low relapse rate of only 3.2% compared to 39% in the remaining node-negative patients. In node-positive patients cathepsin L gave the best risk group assessment (p = 0.001). In conclusion, tumor-associated PAI-1 and cathepsins D and L provide significant, statistically independent prognostic information for DFS and OS in primary breast cancer, even after a median follow-up period of almost 10 years.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up confirms prognostic impact of PAI-1 and cathepsin D and L in primary breast cancer. 1076 46