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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (
gastric cancer
)
36,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent human tumor immunology research has identified several genes coding immunogenic peptides recognized by CD8 cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in melanoma tumors. Very recently,
CD4
T cell antigenic epitopes were also determined in certain melanoma tumors. The use of these peptides in conjunction with human immunotherapy could prove to be of great benefit. However, such peptides in clinically common tumors of epithelial cell origin, such as of the stomach, colon, lung, etc., have not yet been determined extensively. We describe for the first time an HLA-A31 (A*31012)-restricted natural antigenic peptide recognized by the CD8 CTL TcHST-2 of gastric signet ring cell carcinoma cell line HST-2. We also identified the HLA-DRB1*08032-restricted peptide recognized by the
CD4
T cell line TcOSC-20 of squamous cell carcinoma OSC-20 derived from the oral cavity. The antigenic peptide of HST-2, designated F4.2, is composed of 10 amino acid residues with two anchor motif residues necessary for binding to HLA-A31 molecules. The synthetic F4.2 peptide enhanced the reactivity of TcHST-2 against HST-2 cells. Furthermore, introduction of an expression minigene coding F4.2 peptide to HLA-A31(+) cells conferred cytotoxic susceptibility to TcHST-2 on the cells. Some
stomach cancer
lines into which the HLA-A31 gene had been introduced, such as MKN28-A31-2, were lysed by TcHST-2, suggesting the presence of F4.2 peptide in at least some HLA-A31(+) stomach cancers. Furthermore, F4.2 peptide induced an F4.2 peptide-specific CTL response in at least 30-40% of HLA-A31(+) peripheral blood lymphocytes from
gastric cancer
patients, suggesting that F4.2 peptide could be used as a cancer vaccine for gastric tumors. The natural antigenic peptide of OSC-20 was also determined using acid extraction and biochemical separation and by mass spectrometry. Consequently, OSC-20 peptide was designated as the 6-1-5 peptide, an HLA-DRB1*08032-restricted 16-mer peptide with two possible anchor motifs. It has an amino acid sequence identical to that of human alpha-enolase, suggesting that it was derived from the processed parental alpha-enolase protein. We are presently attempting to determine the genes that code tumor rejection antigens recognized by HLA-A24- and A26-restricted T cells, including those of pulmonary and pancreatic carcinomas. The search for these antigenic peptides may lead to the identification of immunogenic peptide antigens that would be suitable for clinical use in commonly occurring epithelial cancers.
...
PMID:Human CD8 and CD4 T cell epitopes of epithelial cancer antigens. 1095 Jan 55
Allogeneic transfusion seems to drive the immune system toward a Th2 response and away from a Th1 response, providing a hypothetical mechanism for transfusion-induced immunomodulation. By means of an intracytoplasmic cytokine detection technique with flow cytometry, it is possible to measure Th1 and Th2 cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. This study evaluated the presence of transfusion-induced immunomodulation in 11
gastric cancer
patients after gastrectomy with perioperative blood transfusion, compared to 11
gastric cancer
patients who were treated by gastrectomy without transfusion. Lymphocytes subsets, including
CD4
T cells, CD8 T cells,
CD4
/CD8 Ratio, CD2(+) T cells, CD3(+) T cells, and CD19(+) B cells, were measured in these patients, as well as variables that might suggest transfusion-induced immunomodulation, such as duration of antibiotic use, duration of hospital stay, and total hospital charges. This study also measured changes in the Th1/Th2 ratio. Th1 and Th2 lymphocytes were characterized by measuring intracellular expression of cytokines with flow cytometry. Cells were stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate and ionomycin in the presence of brefeldin-A. The results showed no significant differences in lymphocyte subsets, Th1/Th2 ratio, total hospital charges, or duration of antibiotic utilization between the groups of transfused and non-transfused
gastric cancer
patients after gastrectomy. The only significant difference was a longer hospital stay for transfused patients (mean 20.5 da) compared to non-transfused patients (mean 16.2 da). The anticipated finding of a Th2 response after blood transfusion was not observed. A larger group of patients may be needed to document such an effect, since many confounding variables affect the morbidity and outcome of surgery in these patients.
...
PMID:Search for immunomodulatory effects of blood transfusion in gastric cancer patients: flow cytometry of Th1/Th2 cells in peripheral blood. 1133 7
BACKGROUND: In Japan, much attention has recently been paid to super-extended paraaortic lymphadenectomy (PAL) for the treatment of advanced
gastric cancer
. However, it has been reported that PAL is associated with increased morbidity and mortality, as compared to conventional extended lymphadenectomy (D2 or D3). Therefore, an analysis of the effects of PAL on perioperative changes in the biological responses of patients essential for determining the potential utility of this procedure.METHODS: The current non-randomized prospective study included evaluations of perioperative changes in parameters of surgical stress (series I; serum levels of antidiuretic hormone, interleukin-6, trypsin, and phospholipase A(2)) and immunocompetence (series II; phytohemagglutinin- and concanavalin A-induced blastogenesis, activity of natural killer cells and the ratio of
CD4
cells to CD8 cells) in patients with advanced
gastric cancer
(T3 or T4), comparing groups treated with D3 plus PAL ( n = 12) and D3 ( n = 13), and a control group with early
gastric cancer
( n = 16) treated with D1 lymphadenectomy (perigastric N1 nodes) between April 1995 and April 1997.RESULTS: The duration of surgery and the amount of blood lost were longer and greater in the D3 plus PAL group than in the D3 and D1 groups. D3 plus PAL and D3 were associated with significant postoperative increases in parameters of surgical stress, as well as with significant postoperative immunosuppression, compared to results with D1. However, there were no significant differences in the respective parameters between the D3 plus PAL and D3 groups.CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that there are no essential differences in patients' biological responses between D3 plus PAL and D3 lymphadenectomy. It appears that PAL-associated morbidity can be minimized by very careful manipulation during the dissection of paraaortic lymph nodes.
Gastric Cancer
1998 Dec
PMID:Effects of super-extended paraaortic lymphadenectomy (PAL) on biological responses in totally gastrectomized patients with T3 or T4 gastric cancer. 1195 44
BACKGROUND: The deleterious effect of blood transfusions on survival has been reported in patients with cancers of various organs. However, it remains unclear whether there is any adverse effect of blood transfusion when the patients are administered anticancer drugs after surgery for gastric cancers.METHODS: Data from patients with gastric resection for advanced
gastric cancer
were retrospectively analyzed to determine the influence of perioperative blood transfusion on the survival rate. All patients were administered anticancer drugs (mitomycin C [MMC] and tegafur-uracil [UFT]). Sixty-nine (33%) of 208 patients received blood transfusion perioperatively, while 139 patients (67%) did not receive transfusion. Multivariate analysis of clinicopathologic prognostic factors, including blood transfusion, was performed. Lymphocyte subsets were measured to investigate the immunosuppressive effect of blood transfusion.RESULTS: The 5-year survival rate was 48.8% in the 69 transfused patients and 66.9% in the 139 non-transfused patients ( P < 0.01). Cox's multiple regression analysis showed that, when patients received anticancer drugs, perioperative blood transfusion was not a significant factor affecting survival after the
gastric cancer
surgery. However, the
CD4
/CD8 ratio at 3 months after the surgery was significantly lower in the transfused group than in the non-transfused group.CONCLUSION: Blood transfusion did not affect the survival of operated patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy. However, the finding that the ratio of
CD4
/CD8 after surgery was significantly higher in the non-transfused group than in the transfused group supports the notion that transfusion causes broad-spectrum immunosuppression.
Gastric Cancer
2000 Aug 04
PMID:Influence of perioperative blood transfusion on the prognosis of patients with gastric cancer receiving anticancer chemotherapy. 1198 5
This report describes the case of a 47-year-old Japanese man with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection with AIDS, who was successfully treated for
gastric cancer
. A review of
gastric cancer
associated with HIV is also presented. Prior to surgical treatment, azidothymidine (AZT), nerfinavir (NFV), and lamivudine (3TC) were administered to the patient in order to improve his blood
CD4
count and reduce the viral burden. Consequently, distal gastrectomy was performed as a curative resection without any complications. The
gastric cancer
included a signet-ring cell carcinoma, as was noted in eight of the nine reported cases associated with HIV. This suggests that the HIV virus may play a role in causing signet-ring cell carcinoma, especially in the stomach.
Gastric Cancer
2000 Dec 27
PMID:Successful curative resection of gastric cancer with AIDS infection. 1198 29
In this paper, we present evidence that the red ginseng powder from Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer inhibits the recurrence of AJCC stage III gastric cancer and shows immunomodulatory activities during postoperative chemotherapy, after a curative resection with D2 lymph node dissection. Flow cytometric analyses for peripheral T-lymphocyte subsets showed that the red ginseng powder restored
CD4
levels to the initial preoperative values during postoperative chemotherapy. Depression of CD3 during postoperative chemotherapy was also inhibited by the red ginseng powder ingestion. This study demonstrated a five-year disease free survival and overall survival rate that was significantly higher in patients taking the red ginseng powder during postoperative chemotherapy versus control (68.2% versus 33.3%, 76.4% versus 38.5%, respectively, p < 0.05). In spite of the limitation of a small number of patients (n = 42), these findings suggest that red ginseng powder may help to improve postoperative survival in these patients. Additionally, red ginseng powder may have some immunomodulatory properties associated with CD3 and
CD4
activity in patients with advanced
gastric cancer
during postoperative chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Effects of red ginseng upon postoperative immunity and survival in patients with stage III gastric cancer. 1256 76
Patients with
gastric cancer
have a variety of immunological abnormalities. In the present study the lymphocytes and their subsets were determined in the peripheral blood of patients with
gastric cancer
(N = 41) both before and after surgical treatment. The percent of helper/inducer
CD4
T cells (43.6 +/- 8.9) was not different after tumor resection (43.6 +/- 8.2). The percent of the cytotoxic CD8+ T cell population decreased significantly, whether patients were treated surgically (27.2 +/- 5.8%, N = 20) or not (27.3 +/- 7.3%, N = 20) compared to individuals with inflammatory disease (30.9 +/- 7.5%) or to healthy individuals (33.2 +/- 7.6%). The
CD4
/CD8 ratio consequently increased in the group of cancer patients. The peripheral blood lymphocytes of
gastric cancer
patients showed reduced responsiveness to mitogens. The defective blastogenic response of the lymphocytes was not associated with the production of transforming growth factor beta (TGF- ) since the patients with cancer had reduced production of TGF- Beta1 (269 +/- 239 pg/ml, N = 20) in comparison to the normal individuals (884 +/- 175 pg/ml, N = 20). These results indicate that the immune response of
gastric cancer
patients was not significantly modified by surgical treatment when evaluated four weeks after surgery and that the immunosuppression observed was not due to an increase in TGF- 1 production by peripheral leukocytes.
...
PMID:Effect of surgical treatment on the cellular immune response of gastric cancer patients. 1264 Apr 98
Cell-mediated immunodeficiency is known to occur in advanced cancer patients, but it is less characterized in earlier stages. Pre-existing immunodeficiency may impair the recovery of postoperative lymphocytopenia, occurring generally within 8-14 days after surgical stress. This study was aimed to verify whether immunodeficiency exists in patients with operable gastric adenocarcinoma and whether radical surgery may restore a count of peripheral blood T helper cells (
CD4
) and
CD4
/CD8 ratio within physiological normal values in the late postoperative period. Thirty-five consecutive patients (M/F 18/17; mean age 67 years, range 42-82) with histologically proven gastric adenocarcinoma, undergoing surgery with radical intent, were studied. Assessment of total lymphocyte count and lymphocyte subsets was performed by FAC scan at baseline, then postoperatively 14 and 50 days after surgery. Normal reference values were according to CDC criteria for HIV immunodeficiency (total lymphocyte > 1500/mmc;
CD4
cells > 500/mmc;
CD4
/CD8 > 1.2). Surgical interventions, including D2 locoregional lymphadenectomy, were as follows: 19 Roux Y total gastrectomies; 3 Roux Y subtotal gastrectomies and 13 Billroth II subtotal gastrectomies. Pathological nodal staging was pN0 in 18 and pN+ in 17 cases. Hystotype was intestinal in 14 patients, diffuse in 14 and unclassifiable in 7. Grading was G1 n = 7; G2 n = 7; G3 n = 21. Lymphocyte immunodeficiency was found at baseline in 41% of patients and at 14 days after surgery in 67% of patients. Recovery of postoperative surgery-induced lymphocytopenia occurred on the 50th day only in those patients with normal values at baseline (59%).
CD4
deficiency was significantly more frequent in pN+ vs. pN0 patients, either at baseline (p < 0.001 ), on the 14th day (p < 0.02) and on the 50th day (p < 0.007) postoperatively. Cancer-related
CD4
deficiency was a frequent finding in our consecutive series of
gastric cancer
patients; this systemic immune impairment was not restored after complete tumor removal, even in late postoperative period (50th day ). Further studies on a larger number of cases may confirm the prognostic value of lymphocyte count in early
gastric cancer
stages, and to verify whether early and late postoperative immunodeficiency may be prevented by IL-2 administration.
...
PMID:Radical surgery does not recover immunodeficiency associated with gastric cancer. 1286 67
Chronic gastritis is frequently associated with infection of Helicobacter pylori and characterized by tissue infiltration of neutrophils, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. To address the mechanism of lymphocyte infiltration in chronic gastritis, we examined the expression of chemokines and their receptors using frozen sections of chronic gastritis, obtained from 23 patients who underwent gastrectomy for
gastric cancer
. By immunohistochemistry, lymphocytes in inflamed gastric mucosa expressed CCR5 abundantly, CXCR3 less frequently, and CCR4 sparsely. The numbers of CCR5(+) cells, which were composed of mainly CD8(+) and partly
CD4
(+) T cells, were positively correlated with the degree of neutrophil infiltration, and decreased in areas with intestinal metaplasia or mucosal atrophy. RANTES/CCL5, one of the ligands of CCR5, was localized mainly in CD8(+) and partly
CD4
(+) T cells with a characteristic dotted pattern, and such lymphocytes were most densely distributed around the neck region of gastric glands. In situ hybridization confirmed the expression of CCL5 mRNA in these cells, and immunoelectron microscopy revealed localization of CCL5 in the membrane-bound granules, which most probably corresponded to the cytolytic granules of cytotoxic T cells. The numbers of CCL5(+) lymphocytes showed a close correlation with the degree of neutrophil infiltration and markedly decreased in intestinal metaplasia. In conclusion, our data suggest that, together with neutrophils, CCL5(+) T cells, presumably activated cytotoxic T cells, would play important roles in the active inflammatory process of chronic gastritis. Our data also suggest a self-recruiting mechanism involving CCR5 and CCL5 for tissue accumulation of such T cells.
...
PMID:Infiltration of CD8+ T cells containing RANTES/CCL5+ cytoplasmic granules in actively inflammatory lesions of human chronic gastritis. 1470 22
Helicobacter pylori is the most important cause of gastritis, peptic ulcers and the development of
gastric cancer
. The chronic active inflammation is dominated by neutrophils, macrophages, lymphocytes and plasma cells. Several interleukins (IL-8, IL-10 and IFN-gamma) are involved in the inflammatory process in the gastric mucosa. The aim of this study was to investigate the gastric inflammation in patients with functional dyspepsia. Fifty-three consecutive patients were included and antral biopsies were obtained for histology, culture and immunohistochemistry. The sections were examined for the interleukins IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10 and IFN-gamma as well as for the cell markers
CD4
, CD8, CD14, Cd19, CD25 and CD30. Only
CD4
and CD19 were significantly increased in patients with increased gastric inflammation and increased density of H. pylori. However, several of the examined markers (IFN-gamma, IL-8, IL-10 and CD14) showed a non-significant trend to be increased in patients with extensive gastric inflammation and high density of H. pylori. Therefore, an arbitrary index (IM11) for all the 11 immunological markers was made as an average value for each of the four morphological groups. For the four morphologically different groups of patients the values were 0.49, 0.77, 0.86 and 1.25, respectively. Significant increases in the index from none to moderate antral inflammation as well as the density of H. pylori were found (p<0.001). By using an index of inflammatory markers trends can be summarized and thereby significant which may be of importance when gastric inflammation is investigated in children and patients with functional dyspepsia.
...
PMID:Gastric inflammatory markers and interleukins in patients with functional dyspepsia, with and without Helicobacter pylori infection. 1586 21
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