Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (breast cancer)
160,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An increase in the serum copper (Cu++) level has been described as a sensitive index of disease activity in several hematologic and nonhematologic malignancies. In order to explore the diagnostic value of Cu++ compared to other hematochemical parameters frequently abnormal in malignancies, Cu++, serum alpha2 globulin (alpha2), plasmatic fibrinogen (Fibr), the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and serum iron (Fe++) have been detected and evaluated in 267 patients affected with the following diseases: Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL), non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas (NHL), Acute Leukemias (AL), Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML), Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL), Myeloma (MM), and Breast Cancer (BC). The best correlation between Cu++ increase and disease activity has been found in HL, NHL, AL, and BC. In these diseases, when the considered parameters were compared, Cu++ and ESR showed a similar pattern, i.e., a high frequency of abnormalities in active disease. It is concluded that Cu++ represents a good complement to some other aspecific parameters in evaluating the activity and diffusion of neoplasias and the therapeutic results, particularly in HL, NHL, AL and BC.
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PMID:The diagnostic value of serum copper levels and other hematochemical parameters in malignancies. 7 79

Antigen(s) related to the major external glycoprotein (gp52) of mouse mammary tumor virus was detected in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. No such antigenic determinants were detectable in normal human mammary epithelial cells.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1978 Nov
PMID:Presence of a mouse mammary tumor virus-related antigen in human breast carcinoma cells and its absence from normal mammary epithelial cells. 8 81

Cancerembryonic antigen (CEA) and beta2-microglobulin (beta2m) have been measured in cancer patients and patients with benign diseases. Of 168 patients with intestinal cancer, almost 90% had increasing concentrations of either CEA or beta2m or both. In 29 patients at different stages of pancreatic cancer there was a high incidence of increased values in the more severe cases. In 60 patients with histologically classified colorectal cancer the TNomegaMomega group of 19 patients had 47% and 42% of elevated beta2m and CEA respectively. A significant correlation of beta2m or CEA to extension of disease was noted. In benign intestinal disease like cirrhosis and pancreatitis both beta2m and CEA is commonly elevated. Of 26 breast cancer patients, seven had elevated CEA and five had elevated beta2m values before treatment. In the patients with extraganglionary metastasis almost 90% had high beta2m or CEA or both. Of 40 patients with uterine cancer, 26 were found to have increased values of beta2m or CEA or both. Finally, 140 colorectal cancer patients, 62 patients with breast cancer and 10 patients with uterine cancer have been followed longitudinally.
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PMID:[beta2-Microglobulin in cancer patients (author's transl)]. 8 77

Forty-eight percent of 93 breast carcinomas that were aspirated with a fine needle were found to be cytologically positive for carcinoma, and in another 31% this diagnosis was suspected. Care of most breast cancer patients with abnormal or questionable aspiration smears was affected by cytological diagnosis. Thirty-seven patients with a positive diagnosis for carcinoma and with consistent clincal findings were informed of the diagnosis prior to surgery and underwent modified radical mastectomies without further frozen-section examination. Twelve other patients with suspect or abnormal cytological reports had biopsies performed earlier because of these findings. A cytopathological diagnosis of carcinoma based on aspiration smears of the breast is highly accurate if strict criterions of malignancy are applied, but normal smears from solid breast masses do not exclude malignancy.
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PMID:The diagnosis of breast cancer by fine-needle aspiration smears. 8 80

There are many questions that have to be answered concerning the role of radiotherapy in the management of primary breast cancer. Hopefully, prospective clinical trials will provide some answers, but more basic research into the biology of breast cancer and the host-tumor relationship will be needed. There are indications that radiotherapy alone, or following minimal extirpative surgery in selected cases, may be as effective for control of breast cancer as conventional mastectomies. The role of radiotherapy following segmental mastectomy, with or without axillary dissection, needs to be clarified. The possibility exists that high LET (linear energy transfer) radiation such as neutron or pi meson beams may provide better local control than conventional radiation. Thus, it may be possible to treat effectively all primary breast cancers with such radiations and obviate the need for any type of mastectomy. It remains to be demonstrated whether adjuvant chemotherapy is as effective as radiotherapy in preventing chest wall and regional node recurrences. If it is not, there may be a place for both adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy in the treatment of operable cancer of the breast. Likewise, effective chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy may increase the local and regional control achieved with radiotherapy alone and make more primary lesions suitable for treatment without mastectomy. Meyer (1970) recently called attention to the leukopenia and cellualr immune deficiency produced by irradiation to the thorax and mediastinum. Further study is necessary to define exactly how much immunosuppression results from radiotherapy, its clinical significance and what can be done to avoid or counter it. If Stjervsward's thesis (1974) concerning the deleterious effects of radiotherapy on survival is correct, then it is of great importance to identify those patients most likely to be adversely affected by radiotherapy. Conversely, it may be possible in the future to identify a subgroup of patients who would not be adversely affected by radiation and who would be most likely to benefit from it.
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PMID:Cancer of the breast. Radiation therapy. 8 50

A prospective, multidisciplinary, 5-year study of 69 consecutive female patients with early (T0,1N0,1M0) breast cancer was conducted. Patients' psychological responses to the diagnosis of cancer were assessed 3 months postoperatively. These responses were related to outcome 5 years after operation. Recurrence-free survival was significantly common among patients who had initially reacted to cancer by denial or who had a fighting spirit than among patients who had responded with stoic acceptance or feelings of helplessness and hopelessness.
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PMID:Psychological response to breast cancer: effect on outcome. 9 Aug 71

The clinical usefulness of 8 potential tumour markers has been evaluated in 69 patients with Stage I and II breast cancer and 57 patients with Stage III and IV. Serum CEA concentrations were raised in 13% of patients with local and 65% of those with advanced breast cancer. In patients with clinical evidence of progression or regression of tumour, serum CEA levels changed appropriately in 83% of cases. Taking 4 of the markers (carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), lactalbumin, alpha subunit and haptoglobin) serum concentrations of one or more were raised in 33% of patients with local disease and 81% of those with advanced breast cancer. However, marker concentrations were often only marginally raised, and are unlikely to provide sensitive guide to tumour burden. CEA, lactalbumin and alpha subunit were detectable in 68%, 43% and 40% respectively of extracts of primary breast cancers.
Br J Cancer 1979 Nov
PMID:Tumour markers in breast cancer. 9 31

Serum antibodies to tumor-associated antigens of breast carcinoma have been studied by indirect immunofluorescence in 109 patients with breast carcinoma and 125 controls, including age/sex matched normal individuals, patients with nonmalignant disease, and patients with malignant disease other than breast cancer. We report here that sera of a large proportion of patients with ductular carcinoma of the breast have antibodies to cell surface and/or intracellular antigens of autologous tumor cells and include evidence that the antigens are absent from a considerable range of normal and other types of malignant tissues. In addition to testing of control sera, specificity of the reacting antibodies was investigated further by testing of sera with normal breast tissue and the absorption of sera from breast cancer patients with various normal tissues and cancer cells. The significance of the findings in breast cancer is discussed.
Cancer 1979 Dec
PMID:Ductular carcinoma of the breast: serum antibodies to tumor-associated antigens. 9 59

A specific receptor for 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D has been demonstrated in a cultured human breast cancer cell line. This is the first such demonstration in any cancer cell. It may explain the high incidence of metastatic bone destruction and hypercalcaemia in this common malignancy, and the limited success of other steroid-receptor assays in predicting the response of breast cancer to therapy.
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PMID:1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D-receptor in breast cancer cells. 9 76

This paper reviews clinical trials at the University of Arizona Cancer Center which were designed to improve the outcome in breast cancer by utilizing the combination of adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (A--C) alone or with the addition of other agents or modalities. Our initial trial in advanced breast cancer with A--C produced an overall objective response rate of 78% in 51 patients with advanced breast cancer without prior chemotherapy. The median duration of disease control was 12 months. Subsequent studies showed that the addition of either vincristine or the androgen, calusterone, effectively doubled the remission duration and prolonged survival. In our surgical adjuvant trial with 6 months of treatment with A--C there has been only a 9% relapse rate in stage II patients thus far, with a median follow-up of close to 2 years. A subset of stage II patients who received regional radiotherapy along with A--C have not yet shown added benefit compared to the use of A--C alone. Since 1975, stage I patients have been treated with an abbreviated treatment schedule (3 courses of A--C over 9 weeks). While there have not yet been relapses in this category, much longer periods of follow-up will be required. The use of A--C (plus other drugs) has clearly provided excellent palliation and improved survival in patients with advanced or recurrent breast cancer; in our opinion it should be used as initial cytotoxic chemotherapy. The brief intensive program of A--C as a surgical adjuvant also shows considerable promise for erradicating occult micrometastases in both pre- and postmenopausal women.
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PMID:[Combination of adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (alone or with other substances) in the treatment of breast cancer]. 9 57


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