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)

Concerning the modulatory role of LPS on immunocompetent cells, the production of interferon by macrophages primed with human gamma interferon (HUIFN gamma), was studied. In particular the production of IFN from primed macrophages of patients affected by breast cancer, differentiated in presence of autologous serum or in serum from healthy donors, was compared with the IFN production from macrophages of healthy donors. The levels of endotoxin-induced IFN were enhanced by priming macrophages with HUIFN gamma. The "in vitro" treatment with Escherichia coli LPS restores the interferon production of primed macrophages, obtained from patients affected by breast cancer, differentiated in presence of serum from healthy donors. Moreover, LPS treatment of primed macrophages from patients, differentiated in autologous serum, did not influence the interferon production of these cells. Nevertheless, primed macrophages from healthy donors appeared to be more sensitive to LPS treatment in comparison with primed macrophages from patients affected by breast cancer.
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PMID:Interferon release by LPS-treated macrophages from patients affected by neoplasia. 256 99

Six different pure human interferons (IFNs), were tested for anti-tumour effect against two human carcinomas, breast and bowel, growing in nude mice, in a total of 36 experiments. The IFN-alpha mixture, analogue and subtypes showed the greatest activity, particularly against the breast cancer xenograft, whereas IFN-beta and IFN-gamma had little effect. However, circulating IFN could be found in the sera of mice treated with all 3 IFN types. In terms of amount of IFN protein, IFN-alpha Con1, an IFN-alpha analogue, was the most effective, a dose of 0.1 micrograms/mouse/day being sufficient to induce breast tumour regression, and IFN-gamma the least effective, a dose of 10 micrograms/mouse/day having no effect on the same tumour. A more detailed comparison of 2 IFN-alpha subtypes showed that a daily dose of 1 microgram IFN-alpha A was more effective than the same dose of IFN-alpha D, but as this IFN had approximately 30 times less antiviral activity on human cells than IFN-alpha D, these IFNs were probably at least equally effective in terms of human cell units. IFN-alpha D stimulated mouse spleen natural killer cell activity but it was not clear whether this stimulation was involved in anti-tumour activity. We conclude that this model system is useful for investigating direct anti-tumour activity of a wide range of IFN types and subtypes.
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PMID:Differential action of six human interferons against two human carcinomas growing in nude mice. 258 1

A total of 745 serum interferon (IFN) determinations were carried out on the serum of 332 cancer patients with a variety of tumors. Disease activity was defined as either 'active' or 'nonactive' as based on clinical examination, the results of laboratory tests and radiological criteria. IFN levels were estimated for both disease activity and mode of treatment. A statistically significant higher level of IFN in the serum of active, as compared to that of nonactive disease, was established. Furthermore, a slight increase in the IFN level was observed in patients before initiating chemotherapy as compared to untreated patients, followed by a decrease in those patients undergoing chemotherapy. These differences between groups were not found to be statistically significant. However, in the cases of rectum, prostate and female genital cancers, a significant elevated level of serum IFN was observed at a late stage of the disease, followed by a decrease after chemotherapy treatment. In addition, a significant lower level of serum IFN was detected in breast cancer patients shortly after radiotherapy as compared to those before radiotherapy. We conclude that IFN, known to play a role in the control mechanisms of developing malignant processes, can be determined in the serum and used to monitor disease activity in individual patients. The inhibition of IFN release depends in part on therapy and can be used for monitoring treatment schedules along the course of disease.
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PMID:Serum interferon as a biological marker in malignant tumors. 258 27

The clinical efficacy of intratumoral (IT) administration of BRM in 157 patients with unresectable or recurrent tumors was investigated, and the infiltration of lymphocyte subsets into tumor tissues after IT administration of BRM was immunohistologically examined, to analyse its action mechanism. BRMs used in this study were OK-432, tumor necrosing factor (TNF), whole peptide glucagon (WPG), interferon (IFN)-alpha, IFN-beta, IFN-gamma and interleukin-2 (IL-2). Among them, one hundred thirty-one patients were evaluable for clinical effects, and the therapeutic response rate (CR + PR) was determined in 11/131 (8.4%). Higher therapeutic responses were found in the patients with esophageal cancer, pancreatic cancer and breast cancer, respectively. As for the relationship between the clinical efficacy of IT administration of BRM and the injected sites, the injection into metastatic lesions was more effective than that into the primary or local recurrence. A increase of lymphocyte infiltration after IT BRM immunotherapy and a variety of lymphocyte subsets in tumor tissue injected with any BRMs were found immunohistologically. These results suggest that IT BRM immunotherapy may be effective for the control of tumor growth locally through host-mediated action.
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PMID:[Clinical efficacy of intratumoral administration of BRM in advanced cancer and their mechanism of actions]. 278 88

Because recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2) and recombinant alpha-interferon (rIFN-alpha) exhibit synergistic antitumor activity in C3HMT1820 T-cell lymphoma and B16 melanoma tumor systems, we have performed a Phase I study of this combination in 55 patients with advanced malignancies for whom no standard therapy exists. Successive groups of greater than or equal to 4 patients have been entered into 12 dose levels (1A-3D), with dose levels 1-3 referring to doses of rIL-2 of 0.1, 0.5, and 2.0 x 10(6) units/m2, respectively, and dose levels A-D referring to doses of recombinant human alpha 2a-interferon (rHuIFN-alpha 2a) of 0, 0.1, 1.0, and 10.0 x 10(6) units/m2. Both agents were given on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, with rIL-2 being given as i.v. bolus injections and rHuIFN-alpha 2a being given intramuscularly. Myelosuppression was dose-limiting and was related primarily to the dose of rHuIFN-alpha 2a. The maximum-tolerated dose level was reached at a dose of rIL-2 of 2.0 x 10(6) units/m2 and of rHuIFN-alpha 2a of 10.0 x 10(6) units/m2 (dose level 3D). At this dose level, 3/6 patients developed grade 3 neutropenia (absolute granulocyte count less than 1 x 10(9)/liter). Myelosuppression was transient, with no documented infections being associated with neutropenia. Hypotension was mild; a single patient was treated with a vasopressor, but all other cases of hypotension responded to fluid administration. No significant pulmonary toxicity was produced. Fever, chills, and malaise were universal but not dose-limiting. Three partial responses and one minor response were observed in patients with malignant melanoma, renal cell carcinoma, and breast cancer. Immunological studies suggested that natural killer activity was related to both the dose of rIL-2 and the dose of rHuIFN-alpha 2a, with natural killer activity being positively related to the dose of rIL-2 and maximal at the lowest dose of rHuIFN-alpha 2a of 0.1 x 10(6) units/m2.
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PMID:Phase I clinical trial of interleukin 2 and alpha-interferon: toxicity and immunologic effects. 280 86

The activity of the enzyme ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) is increased in confluent culture of two breast cancer cell lines (T47D and MCF-7) following a change of medium. The increase in activity is maximum at 12 hours and this level is reduced in cells treated with high concentrations of HuIFN-alpha. However, the increased level of ODC activity seen in the first few hours after medium change can be stimulated by low concentrations of interferon (10-100 units per ml). The activity of the acidic and alkaline phosphatase of the above cell lines are affected by HuIFN-alpha similar to ODC. In stimulating levels of ODC and phosphatases, interferon is acting similar to mitogens, and in T47D and MCF-7 cells this stimulatory effect precedes the inhibitory effect more commonly seen in interferon-treated cells.
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PMID:Ornithine decarboxylase and phosphatase activity can be stimulated by low concentrations of interferon in human breast cancer cell lines. 285 Oct 88

Using the human tumor clonogenic assay technique, the combined effects of mitomycin C (MMC) with alpha-interferon (HLBI) were surveyed in comparison with 33 fresh human tumor specimens. Tumors in this study were 16 gastric cancers, five breast cancers, four liposarcomas, three colon cancers, two gall bladder cancers, two esophageal cancers, and one hepatoma. When the survival fraction observed in drug combination was smaller than the multiplication of each survival fraction observed in each drug alone, the combined effects were considered to be synergistic. Twenty-two of 33 tumors (gastric cancer 11/16, breast cancer 5/5, liposarcoma 2/4, colon cancer 1/3, gall bladder cancer 2/2, esophageal cancer 1/2, and hepatoma 0/1) formed adequate colony numbers for the evaluation of combined drug effects. Synergistic effects were observed in seven tumors (three gastric cancers, one breast cancer, one gall bladder cancer, one liposarcoma and one esophageal cancer), although three tumors (one gastric cancer, one gall bladder cancer, and one colon cancer) exhibited antagonistic effects.
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PMID:[In vitro phase II-III study by clonogenic assay: the combined effects of mitomycin C with alpha-interferon]. 308 90

In vitro chemosensitivity tests of anticancer agents for 119 fresh human tumors were performed by the human tumor clonogenic assay (HTCA) technique and the following results were obtained. Colony growth (greater than or equal to 5 colonies/dish) was observed in 35 of 50 gastric cancers (70.0%), 10 of 17 colon cancers (58.8%), 13 of 14 breast cancers (92.9%), two of six esophageal cancers (33.3%), three of six sarcomas (50.0%), three of 16 hematological malignancies (18.8%) and seven of 10 other tumors (70.0%). Colony growth rate differed according to the type of tumor. Fifty four tumors formed adequate colony growth (greater than or equal to 30 colonies/dish) for the chemosensitivity test. Mitomycin C (MMC), 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU), 4-hydroperoxy cyclophosphamide (CPM), Adriamycin (ADM), Cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum (CDDP), and alpha-interferon (IFN-alpha) were tested. The average positive rates of MMC, 5-FU, CPM, CDDP, and IFN-alpha were 26.9, 21.6, 10.5, 26.9, 36.8, and 23.3% respectively for all the tumors tested. In gastric cancer, the positive rates of MMC and 5-FU were 24.0 and 21.6% respectively, whereas the rates were 33.3 and 33.3% in colon cancer and 18.2 and 16.7% in breast cancer respectively. Each tumor exhibited its own chemosensitivity rates against various anticancer agents. Eighteen of the results obtained were comparable to clinical responses. The true positive rate was 50.0% (2/4) and the true negative rate 92.9% (13/14). A statistically significant correlation was observed between the results of HTCA and clinical responses (chi 2 test, p less than 0.05). The combined effects of IFN-alpha and MMC were surveyed against 20 gastroenterological tumors. Nine tumors exhibited synergistic effect, though antagonistic effect was observed in three tumors. The effects of oxygen tension (2%, 5%, 20%) on colony growth were investigated. The greatest development of colonies occurred at an oxygen of five percent, which is considered to be physiological oxygen tension, and statistically significant increases of plating efficiencies at 5% O2 as compared to those at 20% O2 were observed (t-test, p less than 0.025).
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PMID:[Experimental and clinical studies on chemosensitivity tests of anticancer agents by human tumor clonogenic assay]. 309 23

We have studied the effect of recombinant human tumour necrosis factor (rHuTNF) on growth and macromolecular synthesis in a range of normal and transformed epithelial cell types. Tumour necrosis factor did not affect the growth of normal human mammary epithelial cells, but its growth-inhibitory action on the SV40-transformed human mammary epithelial cell line HBL-100 increased with passage number in association with a progression of malignant phenotype. However, of two lines derived from nude mouse tumours of HBL-100 lines, one, HBLT-12, did not respond to rHuTNF, and the other, HBLT-11 showed some growth stimulation by high dose rHuTNF. Macromolecular synthesis in HBLT-11 was not affected by rHuTNF. The breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and BT20 were sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of rHuTNF. In MCF-7 a gradual decrease in RNA and DNA synthesis occurred over 48 h, ending with an accumulation of cells in S and G2 phase of the cell cycle and cell death. The addition of alpha- or gamma-interferon increased, but did not accelerate the cytotoxicity of rHuTNF.
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PMID:The effect of recombinant human tumour necrosis factor on growth and macromolecular synthesis of human epithelial cells. 310 29

Effects of human recombinant-DNA derived interferon-gamma and -alpha 2 on the adhesion of cultured breast cancer cells (BT-20, ZR-75.1, MCF-7, 734-B and Hs-578-T), larynx carcinoma cells (HEP-2), epidermoid carcinoma cells (KB), lung carcinoma cells (CCL 185), and ovarian carcinoma cells (1847) to the surface of cell culture plastic dishes were studied. Layered cells were detached after a 3-day treatment with interferon either by trypsin-EDTA, trypsin, protease or cooling to 4 degrees C. Treatment with interferon-gamma (500 unit/ml) significantly increased the incubation time for trypsin-EDTA, EDTA and at 4 degrees C necessary to bring cells into suspension for the 4 cell lines BT-20, ZR-75.1, MCF-7 and HEP-2. Interferon-alpha 2 was not able to induce a similar effect. Reattachment of interferon-gamma treated ZR-75.1 cells was not increased after harvesting by trypsinization or EDTA action. Decreased adhesion of cultured cells is associated with transformation and the effects of interferon-gamma may be explained by reinforced normal phenotype. Interferon-gamma induced adhesion was not associated with other interferon effects especially the anti-proliferative activity or modulation of surface antigens.
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PMID:Human interferon-gamma increases adhesion of cultured carcinoma cells to the substratum. 311 53


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