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Query: UMLS:C0017636 (
glioblastoma
)
18,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As previously reported, cytotoxic synergy is produced when clinically achievable concentrations of cytarabine (Ara-C) and hydroxyurea (HU) are used as potential inhibitors of in vitro DNA repair in cisplatin (cis-Pt)-treated human colon carcinoma cells. This pilot study was subsequently designed to duplicate the in vitro dose and schedule and to determine the toxicity of this three-drug combination in two cohorts of patients. 21 patients had received prior chemotherapy and 19 were not previously treated. All patients had refractory solid tumors. They received monthly cycles of an oral loading dose of 800 mg/m2 HU followed every 2 h by 6 oral doses of 400 mg/m2, a 12-h continuous infusion of 200 or 250 mg/m2/h Ara-C concurrent with the HU, and then 100 mg/m2 cis-Pt over 1 h. A total of 95 cycles were given with the expected toxicities of nausea and vomiting and fatigue but not major acute toxicity observed. Thrombocytopenia was significant but transient and was dose-limiting only for patients who had received prior therapy. The median platelet nadir after one cycle was 43,000/microliters for all patients and 67,000/microliters for those who had not undergone prior treatment. Azotemia was treatment-limiting in responding and stable patients, suggesting the possibility of synergistic nephrotoxicity. Interestingly, there were early transient rises in both uric acid and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Partial responses were seen in 9 of 32 patients with measurable disease and there was significantly improvement in 5 of 8 patients with only evaluable disease. The responses or improvement occurred in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer, breast carcinoma,
glioblastoma
, ovarian carcinoma, small-cell lung cancer, and mesothelioma. Of these 14 patients, 9 had failed prior chemotherapy regimens. Significantly, responses were observed in 3 of 8 patients who had previously received cis-Pt, suggesting that the HU/Ara-C combination modulated cis-Pt resistance. Because of these encouraging results, a second pilot study has been initiated with modifications dictated by the toxicity issues raised in this trial.
Cancer
Chemother Pharmacol 1990
PMID:Cisplatin preceded by concurrent cytarabine and hydroxyurea: a pilot study based on an in vitro model. 224 91
Recent studies have shown a survival benefit for patients with recurrent glioblastomas treated with stereotactic brachytherapy. On the basis of these encouraging results, we began a prospective study in 1987 to evaluate the use of brachytherapy in patients with newly diagnosed
glioblastoma
. Patients were considered eligible for this study if they met the following criteria: Karnofsky performance status 70% or greater; tumor size not greater than 5 cm in any dimension; a radiographically well delineated, supratentorial lesion not involving the ependymal surfaces; and pathologically confirmed
glioblastoma
. We treated 35 such patients between 1987 and 1990 with stereotactic brachytherapy as part of their initial therapy. The treatment protocol involved surgery, partial brain external-beam radiotherapy (59.4 Gy in 33 fractions), and stereotactic brachytherapy with temporary high-activity iodine 125 sources giving an additional 50 Gy to the tumor bed. Chemotherapy was not used in the initial management of these 35 patients. To compare our results with those obtained in a matched control group, we identified 40 patients with
glioblastoma
treated with surgery and external radiotherapy, with or without chemotherapy, between 1977 and 1986 at our institution. These patients had clinical and radiographic characteristics that would have made them eligible for the brachytherapy protocol. Survival rates at 1 and 2 years after diagnosis were 87% and 57%, respectively, for patients receiving brachytherapy versus 40% and 12.5%, respectively, for the controls (P less than .001). We conclude that stereotactic brachytherapy improves the survival of patients with
glioblastoma
when it can be incorporated into the initial treatment approach. Unfortunately, only about one in four patients with
glioblastoma
are suitable candidates for brachytherapy at the time of initial presentation.
J Natl
Cancer
Inst 1990 Dec 19
PMID:Results of stereotactic brachytherapy used in the initial management of patients with glioblastoma. 225 Mar 12
A synthetic analog of a hemoregulatory peptide associated with mature human granulocytes (HP5b) has been investigated for inhibitory effects on various cell types in culture as compared to inhibitory action on mouse and human myelopoietic colonies (CFU-gm), which occurs from 1 X 10(-13) to 1 X 10(-6) M in vitro. This includes colony formation by lymphoid T and B cells in capillary cultures, as well as mitogen activation of T, B and NK cells. At higher concentrations, i.e., above 1 X 10(-7) M, an inhibitory effect was found on colony formation. Neither the production of interleukin (IL) 3 by mitogen-activated T cells, nor the proliferation of the IL-3-dependent L/B cell line were affected by the peptide up to 1 X 10(-5) M. A slight inhibitory effect was found above 1 X 10(-9) M on mouse 3T3 fibroblasts. A series of malignant cell lines was also tested. No effect was seen between 1 X 10(-11) and 1 X 10(-7) M on human mammary carcinoma cells in culture. On Ehrlich ascites mouse mammary carcinoma cells a 30% inhibition was seen at 10(-6) M. On a human
glioblastoma
cell line (GaMg) no effect was seen, and on a rat glioma cell line (BT5C) an inhibitory effect was seen at 1 X 10(-7) M and above. No significant inhibition of cell growth was seen on SC1 mouse lymphoma cells from 1 X 10(-9) to 1 X 10(-5) M during 7 days of culture. The investigated normal and malignant cell types in culture were thus not inhibited in very low concentrations which act on CFU-gm. However, a variable inhibitory effect was found at higher concentrations where the inhibition of myelopoiesis was maximal and at concentrations where the inhibition is released. The hemoregulatory peptide thus seems to be a concentration-dependent selective inhibitor of myelopoiesis. The finding that various malignant cells do not respond at lower concentrations supports the possibility of using the peptide as a protector of normal cells during
cancer
chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Selectivity of hemoregulatory peptide (HP5b) action in culture. 227 97
To study the molecular origin of the altered regulation of butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) in nervous system tumors, BuChE complementary DNA (cDNA) sequences from human
glioblastoma
and neuroblastoma cDNA libraries were compared with BuChE cDNAs from normal fetal and adult tissues. A single 2.6-kilobase BuChE cDNA sequence was found in all normal tissues, whereas an additional alternatively terminated BuChE cDNA clone was found in both tumor libraries. The tumor-specific cDNA contained a 3',0.7-kilobase nontranslatable extension, as well as several nucleotide alterations in the normal polyadenylation site. Single-base mutations in the coding region of this unusual BuChE cDNA infer two amino acid substitutions: Asp70----Gly and Ser425----Pro. The Asp70----Gly change has recently been implicated with "atypical" BuChE, which is deficient in its capacity to hydrolyze succinylcholine. The 3.6-kilobase mRNA was less abundant in RNA blot hybridization than the 2.6-kilobase mRNA, which is in agreement with the low ratios between the 3.6- and 2.6-kilobase BuChE cDNA clones in
glioblastoma
and neuroblastoma libraries. Furthermore, size fractionation and microinjection of
glioblastoma
polyadenylated RNA, followed by enzyme activity and selective inhibition measurements, demonstrated two peaks of functional BuChE mRNA, the heavier one probably reflecting the longer transcripts. Chromosomal mapping of the 0.7-kilobase 3' fragment by in situ hybridization localized it to a unique 3q26-ter position, where we recently found an inheritably amplified "silent" defective CHE gene in a family exposed to the cholinesterase inhibitor methyl parathion. Our findings confirm previous genetic linkage mapping of the functional CHE gene to the 3q26-ter position and demonstrate that extended functional mRNA transcripts encoding a BuChE form with two modified amino acids are produced from this gene in
glioblastoma
and neuroblastoma cells.
Cancer
Res 1990 Apr 01
PMID:Expression of alternatively terminated unusual human butyrylcholinesterase messenger RNA transcripts, mapping to chromosome 3q26-ter, in nervous system tumors. 231 87
A case-control study of brain tumor was conducted in collaborating hospitals in Boston, Providence, and Baltimore. Cases were 160 consecutive patients being treated for
glioblastoma
, grade 3 or 4 astrocytoma, or anaplastic astrocytoma. Controls were 128 healthy persons identified among the case's friends. A complex self-administered questionnaire was used to assess exposure to factors of interest. There was some evidence that
glioblastoma
is associated with a decreased susceptibility to allergies, a finding that may call attention to the involvement of immunologic disturbances in brain tumors. Our data are not supportive of previous reports of an association between brain tumors and exposure to pets or farm environment, family history of CNS
malignancies
or other neurologic conditions, or irradiation to the head. We did not find any evidence for an association with life-style characteristics such as cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, use of drugs of any kind, or dietary intake of cured or smoked meat or fish.
...
PMID:Nonoccupational risk indicators of glioblastoma in adults. 231 91
We have studied the growth inhibition, DNA synthesis inhibition and cell incorporation of the new anthracycline 4'-iodo-4'-deoxydoxorubicin (4'-iododoxorubicin) and of its 13-dihydroderivative in a model of doxorubicin-sensitive and -resistant rat C6
glioblastoma
cells; results were compared to those obtained with doxorubicin and doxorubicinol in the same model. 4'-Iododoxorubicin was 7.5 times more potent than doxorubicin on the wild cell line and 45 times on the doxorubicin-resistant line, indicating that cross-resistance was only partial between the two drugs. Whereas doxorubicinol presented only a very faint cytotoxic activity, 4'-iododoxorubicinol retained the same activity as the parent drug against sensitive cells and a lower activity against resistant cells. DNA synthesis inhibition occurred for much higher doses than growth inhibition in the sensitive cells, but for similar doses in resistant cells. In both cell lines, 4'-iododoxorubicin and its metabolite were incorporated to a higher extent than doxorubicin and doxorubicinol respectively. Incorporation of metabolites was always lower than that of their parent compound. We have studied the metabolism of doxorubicin and 4'-iododoxorubicin by sensitive and resistant cells; only traces (less than 5%) of metabolites were identified in the cells as well as in the culture medium. A new cell line was selected for resistance in the presence of low amounts of 4'-iododoxorubicin. It presented a 6-fold resistance to 4'-iododoxorubicin and an 85-fold resistance to doxorubicin. Doxorubicin incorporation was markedly reduced in this cell line while 4'-iododoxorubicin was incorporated to the same extent as in the sensitive line. Measurements of drug efflux were performed in the three cell lines. No significant difference was exhibited between the efflux of doxorubicin and that of 4'-iododoxorubicin in each cell line; these effluxes were very rapid in the doxorubicin-selected resistant line, slow in the wild line and intermediate in the 4'-iododoxorubicin-selected line.
Br J
Cancer
1990 Apr
PMID:Cellular pharmacology of 4'-iodo-4'-deoxydoxorubicin. 233 41
A number of protooncogenes have been implicated in human tumorigenesis. The ABL oncogene is consistently rearranged and activated as a consequence of the translocation t(9;22) that gives rise to the Philadelphia chromosome in chronic myeloid leukemia and in some cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Here we describe rearrangement of ABL in a different type of
malignancy
. The
glioblastoma
cell line A172 lacks germline alleles of ABL. A recombination event, presumably followed by a duplication, has created two ABL alleles in which exon 11 is joined to chromosome 16 sequences. Although the main body of ABL exons was still present, two considerably shortened ABL mRNAs of 3.8 and 2.8 kilobases were detected; the 3.8-kilobase mRNA hybridized exclusively to an exon IB probe. Neither mRNA hybridized to an ABL probe encompassing part of the tyrosine kinase domain. Thus, the cell line A172 is able to survive in the absence of a functional ABL gene product, indicating that the role of ABL is unlikely to be "housekeeping."
Cancer
Res 1990 Jun 01
PMID:Rearrangement of the human ABL oncogene in a glioblastoma. 233 39
The human c-myb gene which encodes a DNA binding protein and which is rarely amplified in neoplastic cells was found to be altered in four human
glioblastoma
cell lines. It exists in multiple copies in 2 out of 4 cases studied. The degree of amplification as determined by densitometry was about 10-fold, a rearrangement within the coding region and an enhanced gene activity of c-myb were noted. The observation of c-myb oncogene amplification and activity in
glioblastoma
cell lines presents the first report of this effect in human brain tumor cells.
Cancer
Lett 1990 Jun 30
PMID:The cellular myb oncogene is amplified, rearranged and activated in human glioblastoma cell lines. 235 20
Using a model of doxorubicin-resistant rat
glioblastoma
cells, we have studied the relationship between the reversal of multi-drug resistance by verapamil and calcium fluxes into the cells. Although it is known to be a voltage-dependent calcium channel blocker, verapamil exerted no effect on calcium entry into the cells. In the absence of calcium in the medium, drug resistance was not affected and verapamil was still active. It was possible to modify calcium fluxes into the cells by using manganese ions (decreasing calcium uptake) or the calcium ionophore A23187 (increasing calcium uptake). These agents had only a marginal effect on the expression of drug resistance by the cells and did not prevent the action of verapamil on its reversal.
Int J
Cancer
1988 Feb 15
PMID:The reversal of doxorubicin resistance by verapamil is not due to an effect on calcium channels. 244 53
The role of cytoreductive surgery alone as effective salvage therapy for immediate palliation and durable symptom-free remission was examined in 17 patients (six with astrocytoma, seven with anaplastic astrocytoma, and four with
glioblastoma
) who developed symptomatic tumor relapse after initial surgery and irradiation. Individuals with widely disseminated subependymal, bihemispheral, or brainstem involvement were excluded. After reoperation, patients with astrocytoma and anaplastic tumors have been observed for an average of 31 and 29 months, respectively. As of this writing, all 13 patients are alive without evidence of tumor progression. Three of the four patients with glioblastomas have died 5, 12, and 17 months after reoperation, respectively. The 14 surviving patients overall have a current average Karnofsky performance level of 95. The durability of surgically induced palliation alone, the safe limits of resectability, and the clinical features associated with a favorable surgical response have been examined. The results indicate that, in selected individuals, durable remissions can be achieved by adequate resection of symptomatic tumor mass.
Cancer
1988 Jul 15
PMID:Surgery for glioma relapse. Factors that influence a favorable outcome. 245 23
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