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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The fragility of the evidence for SV40 association with human cancer is seen in studies of NHL. A publication in 1999 stated that SV40 is rarely present in NHL. In 2002, two laboratories reported SV40 sequences in 42% to 43% of cases of NHL . One of these laboratories also detected SV40 sequences in small proportions of pediatric tumors (e.g.,
Wilm's tumor
, hepatoblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, medulloblastoma, osteosarcoma, and retinoblastoma) and adult carcinomas (e.g., lung, colon, breast, and prostate) These positive results were not confirmed in subsequent studies published in 2003. Capello et al and Mackenzie et al failed to detect SV40 sequences in NHL tissues. Sanjose et al examined sera from patients with NHL and from controls for antibodies reactive to SV40 VLPs, and they detected no significant differences between the two groups. The association of SV40 with NHL is in doubt. An etiologic link between a virus and a cancer becomes plausible when evidence from different lines of enquiry (e.g., epidemiology, pathogenesis, and molecular mechanisms) is mutually reinforcing and together provides a coherent picture that can connect the biology the virus to the characteristics of the disease. The associations of human papillomaviruses with cervical cancer and hepatitis B and C viruses with
hepatocellular carcinoma
are examples in which the etiologic link is clear. With SV40 and mesothelioma, the data on viral sequences in tumors is inconsistent and disputed, and serologic evidence does not support any association. The epidemiologic data do not show that documented exposures tt SV40 increase the risk of mesothelioma. It seems improbable that a single virus (which cannot be conclusively demonstrated to be present in the community) contributes to the development of such a wide variety of tumors, spanning all age groups and histologic types. The weaknesses in the evidence linking SV40 with mesothelioma are summarized in Box 11 It seems unlikely that infection with SV40 contributes to the development of human mesothelioma or any other human cancer.
...
PMID:Causality of mesothelioma: SV40 question. 1555 56
Russell-Silver syndrome (RSS) primarily includes intrauterine growth retardation, postnatal growth failure, body asymmetry, and craniofacial disproportion. Four types of malignancies have been reported in patients with RSS: craniopharyngioma, testicular seminoma,
hepatocellular carcinoma
, and
Wilms tumor
.
...
PMID:Bilateral reactive lymphoid hyperplasia of the orbit in a child with Russell-Silver syndrome. 1561 10
Hepatic resection is the main treatment modality for hepatic tumors in childhood. Advances in diagnostic technique, preoperative preparation, surgical technique, and postoperative management increased the success rate. The aim of this study is to report our experience in hepatic lobectomy, which is relatively rare procedure in childhood. Medical records of 25 patients who underwent hepatic lobectomy between January 1977 and June 2002 were reviewed retrospectively. Age, gender, diagnosis, physical examination findings, results of preoperative laboratory investigations, radiological examination, resectability criteria, preoperative biopsies, chemotherapies, radiotherapies, postoperative pathological results, incisions, operation technique, intraoperative transfusions, drains used, antibiotic prophylaxes, and intraoperative and postoperative complications were evaluated for all patients. Out of 25 patients with hepatic tumor seven patients with hepatoblastoma and four patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
were given 5.7 +/- 0.3 cycles of chemotherapy before the operation. Right lobectomy (n = 12), left lobectomy (n = 5), extended left lobectomy (n = 4), and extended right lobectomy (n = 3) and right lobectomy with enucleation of two masses from left lobe (n = 1) were performed. Intraoperative blood transfusion of 30.7+/-6.0 ml/kg body weight was necessary. Pathological examination of resected tumors revealed hepatoblastoma (n=11), mesenchymal hamartoma (n = 5),
hepatocellular carcinoma
(n = 4), hemangioendothelioma (n=1), malignant mesenchymal tumor (n = 1), hemangioma (n = 1), cyst adenoma (n = 1), and metastasis of cellular mesoblastic
nephroma
(n = 1). Patients were observed in the intensive care unit for 3.4 +/- 0.3 days. Postoperative complications were sepsis (n = 1), disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 2), fever (n = 3), jaundice (n = 3), intraabdominal abscess (n = 3), ileus (n = 2), and subdiaphragmatic abscess with pleural effusion (n = 1). Hepatic lobectomy is a major operation, which is feasible yielding curative results in children. Safe hepatic resections with acceptable blood loss can be performed by a technique relying on good anatomic dissection and surgical control.
...
PMID:Hepatic lobectomies in children: experience of a center in the light of changing management of malignant liver tumors. 1639 9
The neurotrophic receptor tyrosine kinase TrkB, while binding its high affinity ligand brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), will play an essential role for nervous system development, neuronal survival, differentiation, and maintenance. However, accumulating evidences implies that TrkB signal pathway may also be involved in a variety of human cancers, in which TrkB is likely to play a role in initiation and metastasis of carcinomas. Overexpression of TrkB is often correlated with the tumorigenesis, angiogenesis and drug resistance in these malignancies, contributing significantly to the metastasis and aggressive phenotype of these poor prognosis tumors. The evidences to show the significant contribution of TrkB to malignancy not only came from solid tumors such as neoblastoma, pancreas cancer,
Wilm's tumor
and
hepatocarcinoma
, but also came from haematological malignancies such as Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple myeloma. In summary, besides its role in development and function of nervous system, TrkB is likely to also play a role in initiation and metastasis of carcinoma although it still remains to be further investigated and confirmed. Emerging data have suggested that TrkB may be a mediator as well as a marker of carcinogenesis and metastasis, therefore TrkB may be used as a valuable target for cancer therapy especially for the metastatic tumors with poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Neurotrophic receptor TrkB: Is it a predictor of poor prognosis for carcinoma patients? 1700 23
Echocardiography in a 4-year-old boy, with
nephroblastoma
of the left kidney, revealed a large homogenous mass in right atrium extending from inferior vena cava, and protruding through tricuspid valve into right ventricle during diastole. Ultrasonography revealed the contiguous spread of the tumor through renal vein with near total caval occlusion. The patient had a fatal outcome before definite treatment could be started. Intracardiac extension of infradiaphragmatic tumors through caval route, although infrequent, can be seen with renal cell carcinoma,
Wilms' tumor
,
hepatoma
, lymphoma, and uterine and adrenal tumors. Detection of a mass in right atrium in a child should alert the echocardiographer about the possibility of caval spread from a renal neoplasm.
...
PMID:Intra-atrial extension of Wilms' tumor. 1762 24
The
Wilms' tumor
1 gene (WT1) encodes a transcription factor involved in cell growth and development. As we previously reported, WT1 expression is hardly detectable in normal hepatic tissue but is induced in liver cirrhosis. Although WT1 has been found to be overexpressed in a number of malignancies, the role of WT1 in hepatocarcinogenesis has not been clarified. We found that WT1 is expressed in several human
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) cell lines, including PLC/PRF/5 and HepG2, and in
HCC
tumor tissue in 42% of patients. WT1 small interfering RNAs did not affect proliferation rate of
HCC
cells but abrogated their resistance to anoikis. Transcriptome analysis of PLC/PRF/5 cells after WT1 knockdown showed up-regulation of 251 genes and down-regulation of 321. Ninety percent of the former corresponded to metabolic genes, mostly those characterizing the mature hepatocyte phenotype. On the contrary, genes that decreased upon WT1 inhibition were mainly related to defense against apoptosis, cell cycle, and tumor progression. In agreement with these findings, WT1 expression increased the resistance of liver tumor cells to doxorubicin, a compound used to treat
HCC
. Interestingly, doxorubicin strongly enhanced WT1 expression in both
HCC
cells and normal human hepatocytes. Among different chemotherapeutics, induction of WT1 transcription was restricted to topoisomerase 2 inhibitors. When WT1 expression was prohibited, doxorubicin caused a marked increase in caspase-3 activation. In conclusion, WT1 is expressed in a substantial proportion of
HCC
contributing to tumor progression and resistance to chemotherapy, suggesting that WT1 may be an important target for
HCC
treatment.
...
PMID:Wilms' tumor 1 gene expression in hepatocellular carcinoma promotes cell dedifferentiation and resistance to chemotherapy. 1919 Mar 40
Sotos syndrome (MIM #117550) is an autosomal dominant condition characterized by pre and postnatal overgrowth, macrocephaly and typical facial gestalt with frontal bossing, hypertelorism, antimongoloid slant of the palpebral fissures, prominent jaw and high and narrow palate. This syndrome is also frequently associated with brain, cardiovascular, and urinary anomalies and is occasionally accompanied by malignant lesions such as
Wilms tumour
and
hepatocarcinoma
. The syndrome is known to be caused by mutations or deletions of the NSD1 gene. To detect both 5q35 microdeletions and partial NSD1 gene deletions we screened 30 Brazilian patients with clinical diagnosis of Sotos syndrome by multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification. We identified one patient with a total deletion of NSD1 and neighbouring FGFR4, other with missing NSD1 exons 13-14 and another with a deletion involving FGFR4 and spanning up to NSD1 exon 17. All deletions were de novo. The two NSD1 partial deletions have not been previously reported. The clinical features of the three patients included a typical facial gestalt with frontal bossing, prominent jaw and high anterior hairline; macrocephaly, dolichocephaly, large hands; neonatal hypotonia and jaundice. All presented normal growth at birth but postnatal overgrowth. Two patients with NSD1 and FGFR4 gene deletions presented congenital heart anomalies.
...
PMID:MLPA analysis in 30 Sotos syndrome patients revealed one total NSD1 deletion and two partial deletions not previously reported. 1959 67
Homeobox genes encode transcription factors that are essential for normal development and are often dysregulated in cancers. The molecular mechanisms that cause their misregulation in cancers are largely unknown. In this study, we investigate the mechanism by which the Six1 homeobox protein, which has a crucial role during development, is frequently deregulated in several poor outcome, aggressive, metastatic adult human cancers, including breast cancer, ovarian cancer,
hepatocellular carcinoma
and pediatric malignancies such as rhabdomyosarcoma and
Wilms' tumor
. Our results reveal that miRNA-185 translationally represses Six1 by binding to its 3'-untranslated region. Analyses of ovarian cancers, pediatric renal tumors and multiple breast cancer cell lines showed decreased miR-185 expression, paralleling an increase in Six1 levels. Further investigation revealed that miR-185 impedes anchorage-independent growth and cell migration, in addition to suppressing tumor growth in vivo, implicating it to be a potent tumor suppressor. Our results indicate that miR-185 mediates its tumor suppressor function by regulating cell-cycle proteins and Six1 transcriptional targets c-myc and cyclin A1. Furthermore, we show that miR-185 sensitizes Six1-overexpressing resistant cancer cells to apoptosis in general and tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-mediated apoptosis in particular. Together, our findings suggest that the altered expression of the novel tumor suppressor miR-185 may be one of the central events that leads to dysregulation of oncogenic protein Six1 in human cancers.
...
PMID:MicroRNA-185 suppresses tumor growth and progression by targeting the Six1 oncogene in human cancers. 2060 20
The role of fine needle aspiration (FNA) as a first-line diagnostic modality is well-established for neoplastic and nonneoplastic liver masses in adults. However, cytopathologic analysis of such lesions in children and adolescents has not been well studied. An 18-year retrospective review of the cytopathology archives at The Johns Hopkins Hospital identified 44 cases of hepatic FNA in children and adolescents (i.e., 21 years and younger). The cytopathologic material was reviewed and correlated with subsequent surgical pathology diagnoses and/or clinical follow-up. Among the 44 FNAs studied, 40 (90.9%) were deemed diagnostic for evaluation and 4 (9.1%) were nondiagnostic. Twenty four (60%) of the diagnostic FNAs were neoplasms, 10 (25%) were nonneoplastic lesions, and 6 (15%) were "atypical" or "suspicious." There were 21 (87.5%) malignant and 3 (12.5%) benign tumors. Among the malignant cases, metastases/secondary tumors accounted for 12 (54.5%) followed by
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
)--7 (38.1%). The types of metastatic/secondary neoplasms were
Wilms tumor
(2), germ cell tumor (2), acute leukemias (2), and miscellaneous others (6). Among the nonneoplastic lesions focal nodular hyperplasia was most common--4 (40%). Among the "atypical" cases, 4 (66.6%) turned out to be benign on follow-up, 2 were
HCC
, and 1 was Hodgkin lymphoma. Immunoperoxidase (IPOX) studies were done in 20 (45.5%) cases to confirm the cytopathologic diagnoses. Overall, FNA showed a sensitivity of 95.2% and a specificity of 100% for a malignant diagnosis.
...
PMID:Liver lesions in children and adolescents: cytopathologic analysis and clinical correlates in 44 cases. 2130 9
Entry into the cell cycle is governed by cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and CDK-inhibitors (CDKIs). The p53-regulated inhibitor of CDKs (PIC1) is a universal CDKI whose gene expression is directly induced by the p53 tumor suppressor protein. Reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction revealed strong PIC1 gene expression in control MRC-5 human embryo lung cells, but relatively weaker bands in A549 lung carcinoma; Hep3B, Mahlavu, PLC/PRF/5
hepatocellular carcinoma
; SiHa, CaSki, HeLa cervical carcinoma; T24 bladder carcinoma; MCF7 breast carcinoma; Raji Burkitt lymphoma; HT-1080 fibrosarcoma; and G-401
Wilms' tumor
cell lines. These data are consistent with other results obtained by Northern and Western blot and immunoprecipitation techniques, indicating diminished PIC1 expression in cancer cells especially those harboring mutated p53, or human papillomavirus E6 oncoproteins which abrogate p53 activity. PIC1 gene expression was absent in the Molt-4 T-lymphoblastic leukemia cell line with a previously documented alternatively-spliced p53 transcript translating into p53 protein truncated at the carboxyl terminus. It is proposed that this aberrant p53 interferes with the binding of wild-type p53 and other transcription factors to the PIC1 promoter thereby abolishing PIC1 gene expression. This Molt-4 cell line could serve as a useful experimental system for studying the interaction between p53 and other cellular factors with the PIC1 gene. Single-strand conformation polymorphism and direct cycle DNA sequencing analyses demonstrated a PIC1 variant (with an AGC to AGA substitution at codon 31 culminating in a serine to arginine replacement) in Mahlavu, PLC/PRF/5, SiHa, A549 and Raji cell lines. The higher proportion of the PIC1 variant in cancer cell lines (5/13 or 38%) compared with normal individuals (14%), coupled with differences between the predicted secondary structures of the normal and variant PIC1 proteins merit further investigations to elucidate the biological significance of this variant.
...
PMID:The gene encoding the p53-regulated inhibitor of cdks (pic1) is not expressed in the molt-4 leukemia-cell line with p53 truncated at the carboxyl-terminus, and harbors a nucleotide substitution at codon-31 in several other cancer cell-lines. 2155 14
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