Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (melanoma)
69,561 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Blood-borne metastases to a skeletal muscle are rare and may originate in various primary tumors. Recurrent solitary metastasis of renal cell carcinoma, and metastatic lesion as part of disseminated malignant melanoma in skeletal muscles are reported in two patients. In both cases interferon treatment with or without chemotherapy failed in arresting the disease.
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PMID:Metastases to skeletal muscles and interferon treatment. 151 1

Twenty-seven patients with evaluable metastatic cancer were treated with recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) and escalating doses of interferon gamma (IFN-gamma). rIL-2 was infused over a 15 min period at a constant dose (8 x 10(6) IU/m2/8 h x 5 days first cycle, and 8 x 10(6) IU/m2/12 h x 5 days second and third cycles, with 9 days rest between each cycle). IFN-gamma was started 4 days before each cycle of rIL-2 and was given every other day at a dosage of 1 x 10(6) U/m2 x 3/cycle (four patients), 5 x 10(6) U/m2 x 3/cycle (four patients), 5 x 10(6) U/m2 x 5/cycle (four patients) and 10 x 10(6) U/m2 x 5/cycle (15 patients). Common side effects were fluid retention and hepatic toxicity (27 and 15% grade greater than or equal to 2); one ischemic chest pains and one acute respiratory distress occurred. Toxicities were not greater than those described with high dose rIL-2 alone and were similar in each dose level of IFN-gamma. No patient died from the procedure. Four patients responded, one complete response and three partial responses; all were treated with 25 or 50 x 10(6) U/m2/cycle of IFN-gamma (melanoma, two patients; renal cell carcinoma, one patient; lymphoma, one patient). Further phase II studies at these dosages are justified to precisely define the antitumoral efficacy of this association.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 in association with increasing doses of interferon-gamma in patients with advanced cancer. 151 26

The recently synthesized nitrosourea, N-[N'-chloro-2-ethyl-N'-nitrosocarbamoyl]-S-methyl cysteamine sulfoxide (Perrimustine), is water soluble and has a high alkylating activity, similar to that of the widely used nitrsoureas BCNU and CCNU, and a low carbamoylating activity. Preclinical studies with a broad spectrum of murine tumors indicate that this new compound may be clinically useful. The maximally efficient dose range (MEDR) in L1210 bearing mice was 45 mg/m2 (subcurative dose) to 67 mg/m2 (subtoxic dose). The present phase I trial used an intrapatient escalation schedule, so that each patient entering the study received a potentially active dose. The first dose injected was 1:100 of the MEDR suboptimal dose to check for anaphylactic sensitivity. Patients were then given increasing doses at increasing time intervals until toxicity was observed. The highest dose was given on day 150-230. The main toxic effect was myelosuppression [five out of the 24 patients evaluated: one grade 4 thrombocytopenia, two grade 3 thrombocytopenia; anemia and leucopenia were milder (grade 1 to 2 on OMS scale)]. Of the 19 patients evaluated for clinical response, one showed response after the 45 mg/m2 dose (disappearance of the cerebral metastasis with persistence of hepatic localizations in a patient with melanoma) and the disease was stabilized in two cases (a pleural mesothelioma and a renal carcinoma with lung metastases) after 26 and 37 weeks, with total cumulative doses per m2 of 232 and 196 mg, respectively.
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PMID:Phase I trial of Perrimustine, a new cysteamine (2-chloroethyl) nitrosourea: an intrapatient escalation scheme. 152 2

An interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor, and interleukin-1-inducible, high-output pathway synthesizing nitric oxide (NO) from L-arginine was recently identified in rodents. High-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) therapy is known to induce the same cytokines in patients with advanced cancer. Therefore, we examined renal cell carcinoma (RCC; n = 5) and malignant melanoma (MM; n = 7) patients for evidence of cytokine-inducible NO synthesis. Activity of this pathway was evaluated by measuring serum and urine nitrate (the stable degradation product of NO) during IL-2 therapy. IL-2 administration caused a striking increase in NO generation as reflected by serum nitrate levels (10- and 8-fold increase [P less than 0.001, P less than 0.003] for RCC and MM patients, respectively) and 24-h urinary nitrate excretion (6.5- and 9-fold increase [both P less than 0.001] for RCC and MM patients, respectively). IL-2-induced renal dysfunction made only a minor contribution to increased serum nitrate levels. Metabolic tracer studies using L-[guanidino-15N2]arginine demonstrated that the increased nitrate production was derived from a terminal guanidino nitrogen atom of L-arginine. Our results showing increased endogenous nitrate synthesis in patients receiving IL-2 demonstrate for the first time that a cytokine-inducible, high-output L-arginine/NO pathway exists in humans.
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PMID:Evidence for cytokine-inducible nitric oxide synthesis from L-arginine in patients receiving interleukin-2 therapy. 154 78

Thirty-one patients with disseminated melanoma or renal cell cancer (RCC) who had a limited relapse or persistent disease after a partial or complete response to interleukin-2 (IL-2)-based immunotherapy underwent resection of progressing tumors or residual sites of disease. There were no surgery-related deaths. The median time to disease progression after resection for patients with RCC (n = 16) and melanoma (n = 15) was 11 and 5 months, respectively. All patients with melanoma had tumor progression within 10 months of surgery. Seven of 16 patients with RCC were free of tumor progression 4 to 44 months after surgery. Three of 12 patients with RCC rendered disease-free by surgery remain disease-free after 2 years. These data suggest that surgical resection is a reasonable option in selected patients who have a relapse after responding to IL-2-based immunotherapy. Although this retrospective study could not determine the relative survival benefits of surgery and immunotherapy, it showed that resection of metastatic disease after a response to immunotherapy can result in significant disease-free survival in patients with RCC but not melanoma.
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PMID:Surgical resection of metastatic renal cell carcinoma and melanoma after response to interleukin-2-based immunotherapy. 155 Oct 67

The protein previously called "Mr approximately 50/pI approximately 6.9," which we observed to be induced by the immunoregulatory cytokine interferon (IFN)-gamma in human fibroblasts, was purified from a total cell lysate by preparative two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and identified by partial amino-terminal sequencing as leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), a 53-kDa cytosolic exopeptidase. Induction of LAP protein by IFN-gamma, confirmed by immunoblotting with an antiserum raised against bovine lens LAP, is a consequence of induction of LAP mRNA and occurs in all four human cell lines examined: HS153 fibroblasts, ACHN renal carcinoma, A549 lung carcinoma, and A375 melanoma. Induction of LAP mRNA is a secondary response to IFN-gamma, blocked by inhibition of protein synthesis with cycloheximide.
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PMID:Induction of leucine aminopeptidase by interferon-gamma. Identification by protein microsequencing after purification by preparative two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. 155 94

In this study we evaluated the clinical response of 12 patients with malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) following administration of recombinant human interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) by continuous infusion. Serum samples taken before, during and following sequential courses of IL-2 were assayed for the presence of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) IL-1 alpha, IL-6 and interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) and the presence or changes in these cytokines were examined with respect to clinical response data: our results did not show any direct correlation between the parameters measured and clinical outcome. In addition, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) derived from 3 RCC patients were cultured in a serum-free environment and the resulting supernatants assayed for the production of these cytokines and compared to the corresponding serum levels. During one or more courses of treatment only 1 patient, who had metastatic bone disease, demonstrated detectable serum TNF-alpha; serum IL-6 levels were elevated in a proportion of all patients studied and a sustained IL-6 response occurred in a patient who had complete disease remission; IL-1 alpha was detected in the serum of 3 RCC patients; IFN-gamma could not be detected in any serum sample tested. Cytokine levels in sera and supernatants derived from 3 RCC patients were compared but no correlation was found: TNF-alpha and IL-6 were shown to be present at much higher concentrations in supernatants when compared to sera whereas the levels of IL-1 alpha were almost undetectable. This lack of correlation is probably due to the presence of "interfering" proteins in sera which either depress or enhance the ability to detect cytokines in sera using enzyme immunoassays.
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PMID:Treatment of malignant melanoma and renal cell carcinoma with recombinant human interleukin-2: analysis of cytokine levels in sera and culture supernatants. 156 93

Gastric metastases are rare, usually discovered at autopsy. The most frequent ones are breast and bronchial cancer, as well as malignant melanoma. The case of a patient with upper gastroenterological hemorrhage due to an ulcerated metastasis from a renal cell carcinoma is presented.
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PMID:[Gastric metastasis of renal cell adenocarcinoma]. 156 4

Spiroplatin was investigated in a multicenter phase II study, during which the drug was given over 4 h. 64 Patients with nine different solid tumors received 141 cycles of spiroplatin at a dose of 30 mg/m2 every 3 weeks. Most important side effects included nausea, vomiting, myelosuppression, and renal toxicity. Four of 11 evaluable patients with prior cisplatin developed increases in serum creatinine (3 transient, 1 died of renal failure). Of 51 patients without prior cisplatin 2 had a transient increase in serum creatinine levels, and 2 showed persistent changes, in 1 of them leading to hemodialysis. Pre- and posthydration did not reduce drug-induced nephrotoxicity. Only 3 patients showed a response; 1 with renal cell carcinoma, 1 with ovarian carcinoma, and 1 with malignant melanoma. Based on the absence of striking antitumor activity and on the presence of severe unpredictable renal toxicity, the study was stopped prematurely.
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PMID:Multicenter phase II study of spiroplatin. 157 59

Recent progress in elucidating the complex and heterogeneous interactions between malignancy and coagulation or fibrinolysis reactions in humans has clarified the pathogenesis of disseminated intravascular coagulation that occurs with malignancy and has revealed evidence for two distinct pathways of growth regulation based on production by tumor cells of initiators of thrombin formation versus plasminogen activators. We have proposed a preliminary classification of tumors (see Table 2) based on these interactions. Type I tumors are those in which the tumor cells are associated with an intact coagulation pathway that leads to thrombin formation at the tumor periphery but in which the tumor cells lack u-PA. Examples of tumors in this category include SCCL, malignant melanoma, and renal cell carcinoma. Type II tumors are those in which the tumor cells express u-PA but lack an associated coagulation pathway leading to thrombin formation. Examples of type II tumors include prostate cancer, colon cancer, breast cancer, and N-SCLC. Type III tumors are those that express neither of these pathways, or exhibit some other pattern of interaction. Obviously, this formulation must be regarded as hypothetical. However, this concept fits with the limited data available to date from clinical trials. More importantly, this hypothesis can be tested further by means of intervention aimed at interrupting pathways relevant to specific tumor types. Characterization of additional tumor types by the methods described should permit amplification of this classification of tumors and other patterns of interaction may be defined. Exploration of the coagulation-cancer interaction holds considerable promise for gaining new understanding of both the coagulation mechanism and tumor biology. Most intriguing is the prospect that imaginative approaches to cancer treatment may be devised that are not only relatively nontoxic and low cost, but also effective.
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PMID:Pathways of coagulation/fibrinolysis activation in malignancy. 157 11


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