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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Scirrhous gastric cancer cells proliferate rapidly with fibrosis, when the cancer cells invade into the submucosa of the stomach. To investigate the mechanisms responsible for the rapid proliferation, the growth interaction between gastric cancer cells and fibroblasts was examined. Human gastric cancer cell lines established from scirrhous carcinoma or well-differentiated adenocarcinoma were used. Human fibroblast cell lines were obtained from various organs. The growth interaction between gastric cancer cells and fibroblasts was examined by calculating the number of cancer cells or by measuring [3H]thymidine incorporation of cancer cells. Gastric fibroblasts specifically stimulated the growth of scirrhous gastric cancer cells, but not that of well-differentiated adenocarcinoma cells. The growth factor(s) produced from gastric fibroblasts were then partially purified and characterised. The growth-promoting factor(s) had apparent molecular weights of 10000 dalton and was sensitive both to heat and proteinase treatment. No inhibition for the factor(s) was achieved with defined anti-growth factor antibodies. In this study, differential responses of scirrhous and well-differentiated gastric cancer cells to orthotopic fibroblasts were shown. Rapid proliferation of scirrhous gastric carcinoma should be partly controlled by orthotopic fibroblasts. The growth factor(s) from gastric fibroblasts, which was distinct from various defined growth factors such as epidermal growth factor (EGF), basic fibroblast growth factor (b-FGF), transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), keratinocyte growth factor (KGF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) may play an important role in the progression of scirrhous gastric cancer cells.
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PMID:Differential responses of scirrhous and well-differentiated gastric cancer cells to orthotopic fibroblasts. 885 81

We have previously shown that platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor (PD-ECGF) is associated with angiogenesis of human colon cancer; this factor is expressed at high levels in vascular tumors that express low levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). In these colon cancers, the major source of PD-ECGF is the infiltrating cells. In this study, we examined the role of PD-ECGF in the angiogenesis of human gastric cancer. Immunostaining for PD-ECGF was done on 93 gastric cancers previously stained for VEGF, basic fibroblast growth factor, and factor VIII-related antigen (specific for endothelial cells). To determine the cell type expressing PD-ECGF, double staining was done using antibodies to both PD-ECGF and CD68 (specific for macrophages). PD-ECGF was expressed more frequently in infiltrating cells (positive CD68 staining; 53.8%) than in tumor epithelium (9.7%; P < 0.0001). Infiltrating cells simultaneously stained positive for both PD-ECGF and CD68. An association between PD-ECGF expression in infiltrating cells, VEGF expression in tumor epithelium, and vessel count was observed in intestinal-type gastric cancer but not in diffuse-type gastric cancer. Vessel count was greater in tumors with high expression of both PD-ECGF and VEGF than in those with high expression of either factor alone (P = 0.002). Multiple angiogenic factors expressed by both tumor cells and infiltrating cells may play a role in the regulation of angiogenesis in intestinal-type gastric cancer.
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PMID:Significance of platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor in the angiogenesis of human gastric cancer. 951 32

Although scrirrhous cancer has the highest malignant potential among various types of gastric cancer, its pathogenesis is still unclear. The relationship between expression of p53 or vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and clinicopathological variables was investigated by immunohistochemical analysis of archival specimens from 40 patients with scirrhous gastric cancer. Staining for p53 and VEGF was observed in the nuclei and cytoplasm of the tumor cells, respectively. There was no significant association between expression of p53 or VEGF and sex, age, depth of invasion, lymph node metastasis or histological stage. Peritoneal dissemination was the most frequent mode of recurrence, and the depth of tumor invasion was a crucial factor. The recurrence rate was 83.9% (2/9) in patients without serosal invasion. Only 7 out of 40 patients (17.5%) survived without recurrence. Among them, the VEGF-positive rate was 14.3% (1/7), whereas it was 52.6% (10/19) in the patients with recurrence. There was no correlation between p53 and VEGF staining. These findings suggest that the progression of scirrhous gastric cancer may be promoted by VEGF overexpression, which is not upregulated by p53 mutation.
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PMID:Relationship of p53 and vascular endothelial growth factor expression of clinicopathological factors in human scirrhous gastric cancer. 956 47

We investigated the utility of examining biological markers to predict chemoresponse and survival. The subjects consisted of 39 unresectable gastric cancer patients treated with a combination of 5-fluorouracil and cis-platinum. The expression of p53, bcl-2, thymidylate synthase (TS), glutathione S-transferase pi (GST-pi), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the formalin-fixed biopsy samples of primary tumors before chemotherapy was examined immunohistochemically. The positive rate for VEGF, bcl-2, TS, p53, and GST-pi was 51, 10, 46, 38, and 69%, respectively. VEGF-positive cases showed a higher response rate than did negative cases (11 of 20 versus 2 of 19 cases; P = 0.0057). The cases that were negative for p53, TS, bcl-2, and GST-pi were more likely to respond to chemotherapy than the cases that were positive for these markers. The 10 cases having 4 or 5 favorable phenotypes (VEGF positive, p53 negative, bcl-2 negative, TS negative, and GST-pi negative) survived longer than the remaining 29 cases (P = 0.0069). Multivariate analysis revealed that the number of favorable phenotypes (> or = 4 versus < or = 3) had a greater impact on survival than performance status (0 versus 1 or 2), age (> 60 years versus < or = 60 years), macroscopic type (scirrhous versus nonscirrhous), histological type (intestinal versus diffuse), or tumor extent (locally advanced versus metastatic). Immunohistochemical examination of biological markers in biopsy samples may be useful in predicting the clinical outcome of unresectable gastric cancer patients treated with 5-fluorouracil and cis-platinum.
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PMID:Biological markers as a predictor for response and prognosis of unresectable gastric cancer patients treated with 5-fluorouracil and cis-platinum. 962 64

VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) is known to play crucial roles in tumor angiogenesis. In 281 gastric cancer patients, aberrant increase of VEGF level was observed in 36 patients (12.8%). In 14 recurrent patients, 8 showed an increase of VEGF. The serum VEGF levels of stage IV cancer were significantly higher than those of stage I. The serum levels of recurrent patients were significantly higher than those of stage I, II and III. VEGF levels of patients with serosal invasion were significantly higher than those of patients without serosal invasion. In depth of invasion (t-factor), VEGF levels of t4 cancer were significantly higher than those of t1-t3. In venous infiltration of tumors, VEGF levels of v3 were significantly higher than v0 and v1. There was no significant difference with respect to H-factor and P-factor status. In eleven recurrent or advanced gastric cancer patients, serum VEGF was sequentially examined between pre- and post-chemotherapy. All of them showed a decrease of serum VEGF concentration after partial response by chemotherapy. The patients who had progressive disease after chemotherapy showed an increase of VEGF levels. Serum VEGF levels were closely related to the extent of gastric cancer and the response of chemotherapy.
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PMID:Concentrations of vascular endothelial growth factor in the sera of gastric cancer patients. 976 80

Angiogenic growth factors are essential for cancer metastasis, and the growth of metastatic foci also depends on these angiogenic growth factors as well as autocrine or paracrine growth factors. We therefore investigated whether vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and thymidine phosphorylase (dThdPase) are localized more often in primary tumors with hepatic metastasis than in those without such metastasis and whether transforming growth factor (TGF-alpha) and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) are coexisted more often in hepatic metastases than in primary tumors of gastric cancer. Resected specimens from 82 patients with gastric cancer were examined immunohistochemically. The primary antibodies used were anti-VEGF, anti-dThdPase, anti-TGF-alpha and anti-EGF-R. VEGF expression was found to be higher in primary cancers with than in those without hepatic metastasis (p < 0.001), while VEGF was frequently observed in both hepatic metastases and in the primary tumors. Localization of dThdPase was also higher in advanced than in early gastric cancers (p = 0.021). High co-presence of TGF-alpha and EGF-R was detected more frequently in cancers with deep gastric wall invasion than in those without such invasion (p = 0.050), and also more often in cancers with venous invasion (p = 0.007) and those in the advanced stage (p = 0.020). Co-presence of TGF-alpha and EGF-R was found to be higher, though not significantly, in hepatic metastases (58.8%) than in primary tumors (29.4%). These findings suggest that localization of VEGF may play an important role in hepatic metastasis, and that the expression of VEGF, dThdPase and the TGF-alpha/EGF-R pathway may be responsible for the growth of hepatic metastasis.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical demonstration of angiogenic growth factors and EGF receptor in hepatic metastases and primary human gastric cancer. 980 88

Angiogenesis is essential for tumor growth and metastasis and depends on the production of angiogenic factors by host and/or tumor cells. The role of angiogenesis and angiogenic factor expression in intestinal- and diffuse-type gastric cancer are undefined. Archival specimens of 51 intestinal-type and 38 diffuse-type human gastric carcinomas were examined for tumor vessel counts, angiogenic factor expression, and the presence or absence of angiogenic factor receptors on tumor endothelium using antibodies against vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors (KDR and flt-1), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and its receptors (bek and flg), and factor VIII (endothelial cells). Vessel count and VEGF and bFGF expression were higher in intestinal-type than in diffuse-type gastric cancers (P = 0.01, P < 0.001, and P < 0.001, respectively). Similarly, vessel count and VEGF expression were higher in patients with liver metastasis than in patients with peritoneal dissemination (P = 0.003 and P = 0.01, respectively). Vessel count correlated with VEGF expression and the presence of endothelial KDR in intestinal-type gastric cancer (P = 0.003 and P = 0.02, respectively) but not diffuse-type gastric cancer. Vessel count, VEGF expression, and presence of endothelial KDR increased with increasing stage of disease in intestinal-type gastric cancer but not diffuse-type gastric cancer. The expression of bFGF and its receptors did not correlate with vessel count in either cancer type. These findings suggest that the pattern of metastasis in intestinal-type gastric cancer is angiogenesis dependent. The correlation of VEGF expression and its endothelial receptor with vessel count and stage of disease suggests that VEGF is at least one of the factors responsible for the induction of angiogenesis in intestinal-type gastric cancer.
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PMID:Significance of vessel count and vascular endothelial growth factor and its receptor (KDR) in intestinal-type gastric cancer. 981 16

It has been reported that decreased numbers of dendritic cells (DCs) are correlated with poor prognosis in some types of malignancy, such as gastric cancer. However, factors that determine the density of DCs have not been characterized. It was recently reported that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibits the functional maturation of DCs from CD34+ precursors. In this study, we analysed the relationship between the expression of VEGF and the density of DCs in gastric carcinoma tissues by immunohistochemical staining. The extent of infiltration by DCs was graded from marked to slight on the basis of the mean densities of DCs. The prognosis of patients with marked infiltration was significantly better than that of patients with slight infiltration among patients who had undergone curative resection. Multivariate analysis showed that infiltration by DCs was an independent prognostic indicator. Furthermore, there was an inverse correlation between the density of DCs and the expression of VEGF Our results suggest that expression of VEGF might be associated with tumour progression and poor prognosis not only because VEGF stimulates angiogenesis, but also because it allows tumours to escape from attack by the immune system in patients with gastric carcinoma.
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PMID:Relationship between the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor and the density of dendritic cells in gastric adenocarcinoma tissue. 986 66

Circulating vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) was measured in gastric and colorectal cancer patients using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Firstly, serum and plasma samples were collected from 20 normal controls to compare the values of VEGF and to determine which specimen type was most suitable for detecting circulating VEGF. Seventeen of 20 normal controls had plasma VEGF levels under the limit of detection (15 pg/ml) and the levels of the remaining three controls were 21, 22 and 38 pg/ml. In contrast, all serum samples indicated high levels of VEGF (mean 238 pg/ml), ranging from 44 to 450 pg/ml. In a time-course test of two normal controls serum VEGF values increased markedly between 30 and 60 min and remained high, whilst plasma VEGF values were low up to 480 min. Thus, plasma samples are more suitable for the measurement of circulating VEGF. Next, plasma VEGF levels were examined in 44 patients with gastric cancer (8 early, 7 advanced without remote metastasis and 29 metastatic), 13 with colorectal adenoma (2 with focal cancer) and 26 with colorectal carcinoma (8 advanced without metastasis and 18 metastatic) before treatment. An extremely high plasma concentration of VEGF was seen in some cancer patients with metastasis. To discriminate these patients, a cut-off level was determined, considering both the distribution of the sample concentration and the upper limit of 95% confidence area of VEGF in the cancer patients without metastasis. The cut-off value was 108 pg/ml and most cancer patients without metastases had VEGF levels below the cut-off value. In 11 of 29 metastatic gastric cancer patients (38%) and 9 of 18 metastatic colorectal cancer patients (50%), plasma VEGF levels were higher than the cut-off value. Survival was also analysed in the patients with metastasis. It was significantly longer in the patients with low VEGF levels (below the cut-off) than in those with high VEGF levels (logrank test, P = 0.042). 34 patients with metastasis (19 gastric cancer and 15 colorectal cancer) were treated with systemic chemotherapy, and their pretreatment levels of plasma VEGF and conventional tumour markers (CEA and CA19-9) were evaluated in relation to response. The response to chemotherapy was significantly higher in patients with low VEGF levels (< or = 108 pg/ml) than in those with high VEGF levels (P = 0.047). Such a difference was not observed with CEA/CA19-9. In conclusion, plasma VEGF is a useful marker for tumour metastasis and patient survival, and a possible predictive factor for the response of patients with gastrointestinal cancer to chemotherapy.
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PMID:Clinical significance of plasma vascular endothelial growth factor in gastrointestinal cancer. 1007 Mar 8

The importance of tumour angiogenesis in the process of tumour growth and progression in solid tumours has been widely accepted. Among many angiogenic factors, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been shown to play a major role in the development and dissemination of the malignant tumours. Nitric oxide (NO) production was also observed in solid tumour tissues. NO has been reported to play an important role for the mitogenic effect of VEGF in the angiogenic process. However, little is known about the correlation between VEGF and NO in circulating levels. Therefore, we investigated serum VEGF and NO concentrations in human gastric cancers as well as healthy individuals, and examined the influence of tumour stage on circulating level of VEGF. The study consisted of 11 healthy individuals and 37 patients with primary gastric cancer who did not receive any prior therapy. Patients were categorized into four groups according to TNM classification. The level of VEGF165 in preoperative sera of gastric cancer patients and healthy donors was assayed using the quantitative sandwich enzyme immunoassay technique. NO concentration was estimated indirectly from serum nitrite. The ANOVA test showed a significant difference in serum VEGF165 concentrations between tumour stages (P < 0.001). A striking relationship was found between serum NO levels and tumour stage (P < 0.001). A significant difference was also seen between healthy individuals and patients with stage 1 disease. The present study suggested that large tumour burden was associated with significantly increased levels of VEGF165 and NO.
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PMID:Serum concentrations of vascular endothelial growth factor and nitrite as an estimate of in vivo nitric oxide in patients with gastric cancer. 1040 10


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