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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Small
tumor
cell foci, whether left in situ during primary surgical excision or escaping lethal radiation damage, as well as distant metastases, are the primary reason for treatment failure in man and are the proper targets for the chemotherapist and immunotherapist. Since cure probably requires reduction of the total body burden of
tumor
cells to very small numbers (possibly to less than one cell), and since first-order kinetics of
tumor
cell kill by drugs appears to be a natural law in cancer chemotherapy, drug treatment should be started as soon as possible after likely noncurative primary treatment with surgery or radiation. Current knowledge of
tumor
cell population growth kinetics indicates that the growth fraction (viable
tumor
cells undergoing active cell replication) is inversely related to population size.
Tumor
cells in micrometastases should, therefore, be more sensitive to anticancer drugs active against anabolizing cells than are
tumor
cells in the larger, grossly apparent primary tumor from which they were derived. This indicates the probability that micrometastases will be effectively responsive to more drugs than is the primary and clinically apparent
tumor
from which they came. Studies with at least four metastatic and uniformly fatal murine solid tumors (lung, breast, colon, and
melanoma
) have demonstrated significantly improved cure rates with drug treatment following surgical removal of the grossly apparent primary tumor than can be obtained with either surgery or drug treatment when used alone. Further, both disease staging and drug dosage have been shown to influence cure rates of combined-modality treatment. With several mouse tumors, a significantly smaller number of viable
tumor
cells can establish lethal tumors in the presence of radiation-inactivated
tumor
cells than in their absence. This suggests that small numbers of residual viable
tumor
cells in radiation-treated
tumor
sites may be a greater threat to clinical cure than smaller
tumor
cell populations remaining in situ after surgery.
...
PMID:Concepts for treatment of micrometastases developed in murine systems. 17 96
The results of various in vitro analyses indicate there is an active immune response against antigens associated with human malignancies. This immune response apparently can be augmented by nonspecific immunologic stimulates such as BCG. These agents are effective for destroying
tumor
when injected locally into intracutaneous disease but are not as effective for subcutaneous disease. Preliminary clinical trials indicated that immune stimulants are effective when administered systemically. The effect is only minimal for diseminated disease, but the therapeutic benefit is clearly augmented for patients with a minimal residual tumor burden, such as those patients with metastases to regional lymph nodes. Thus immunotherapy is a systemically active mode of therapy. Its toxicity is minimal, and it appears to be effective in a wide spectrum of the disease. However, immunotherapy is not effective for a large residual tumor burden; consequently it must be used in combination with other modes of treatment such as irradiation therapy or chemotherapy. Early experiences with BCG immunotherapy for
malignant melanoma
and C. parvum for oat cell carcinoma are encouraging. It is remarkable that a nonspecific immunologic stimulant does, in fact, have this effect. Immunotherapy experiments in animals suggest that in order to achieve maximal benefit. BCG must have close contact with
tumor
cells or must be combined with a tumor-associated antigen. If these principles are true for man, it would seem that improvements for nonspecific immunotherapy in human neoplasms would be further augmented if a
tumor
-related antigen could be extracted from human tumours and combined with a nonspecific immunologic stimulant.
...
PMID:Immunotherapy of malignancies: current status. 17 34
A case is described in which a pigmented
tumor
occupied the pituitary fossa with a large suprasellar extension. Its histological and ultrastructural appearances resembled those of a
melanoma
. The origin of the
tumor
is discussed with particular reference to Rathke's pouch.
...
PMID:Melanoma of the pituitary. Case report. 18 Feb 67
Sera from cancer patients and healthy individuals, obtained from two independent sources, were examined for their abilities to react with herpes simplex virus-associated
tumor
antigens, AG-4 and NVA-TAA (nonvirion antigen-tumor-associated antigen). Both antigens were prepared by infection of HEp-2 cells with herpes simplex virus type 2, and all antigen-antibody interactions were measured by the micro-complement fixation test. Of sera from 16 patients with cancer of the uterine cervix, 81% (P less than 0.01) reacted with NVA-TAA, whereas 78% (P less than 0.001) of 18 sera examined reacted with AG-4. These values differed significantly from those for normal sera, of which 14% reacted with NVA-TAA and 13% with AG-4. Of sera for 8 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck or vulva, 75% (P less than 0.02) reacted with NVA-TAA, whereas 63% (P less than 0.05) reacted with AG-4. As a group, other cancers (including adenocarcinoma of lung, breast, ovary, and cervix; liposarcoma; sarcoma;
melanoma
; and carcinoma of the endometrium) did not differ significantly from controls in reactive patterns with AG-4 or NVA-TAA. These studies partly supported the reported preferential reactivity of AG-4 and NVA-TAA with sera of patients with squamous cell carcinoma, especially of the uterine cervix.
...
PMID:Comparative diagnostic aspects of herpes simplex virus tumor-associated antigens. 18 98
Spleen cells removed from C57Bl/6J mice bearing a methylcholanthrene-induced fibrosarcoma (MC-16) demonstrate suppressed responsiveness of phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induced mitogenesis as compared to non-tumorous mice. A similar depression of PHA-induced mitogenesis was observed with spleen cells from C3H/HeJ mice bearing syngeneic mammary adenocarcinomas (C3HBA). The administration of indomethacin, a non-competitive irreversible prostaglandin (Pg) synthesis inhibitor, (75 or 100 mug/mouse, IP) on an alternate day basis to groups of
tumor
-bearing mice of both strains, significantly enhanced immune cell responsiveness to mitogenic stimulation. The addition of indomethacin (10 mug/ml) to cultures of spleen cells from these
tumor
-bearing mice, as well as to DBA/1J mice bearing the Cloudman S-91
melanoma
, enhanced spleen-cell responsiveness to mitogen-induced DNA synthesis by as much as 156%. Indomethacin administration in vivo or in vitro had no significant effect on mitogen-induced DNA synthesis of spleen cells from non-
tumor
-bearing animals. It is hypothesized that tumors, or
tumor
-cell antigens, increase Pg production of a population of spleen cells, and that the increased Pg content of the spleen may be important in controlling immune responsiveness in mice.
...
PMID:Indomethacin enhancement of spleen-cell responsiveness to mitogen stimulation in tumorous mice. 18 13
Ninety-one human tumors, including various common carcinomas, low-grade malignant tumors, and benign tumors, were transplanted into athymic nude mice.
Tumor
take was confirmed histologically for 22 neoplasms at the initial transplantation, and 14 serially transplantable tumors were established, including some hitherto unestablished or unreported, such as lung and hepatic cell carcinomas. Among the 91 tumors were 21, 14, and 13 carcinomas of the lung, stomach, and breast, respectively. Transplantability was highest in lung carcinomas (10/21), followed by gastric carcinomas (2/14) and breast carcinomas (1/13). Morphology of original tumors was retained well in most transplanted tumors, but desmoplastic or scirrhous tumors, such as gastric and breast carcinomas, tended to become medullary with a decrease in amount of
tumor
stroma. The ability to produce mucin in gastric carcinomas or melanin in
malignant melanoma
was maintained in serially transplantable tumors. In addition, ectopic production of adrenocorticotropin and beta melanocyte-stimulating hormone continued in a transplanted small cell carcinoma of the lung. Preliminary results were obtained on hormone dependency of the transplantable breast carcinoma and on alpha1-fetoprotein in the transplantable hepatic cell carcinoma.
...
PMID:Transplantation of human tumors in nude mice. 18 24
Nineteen outpatients with
malignant melanoma
and squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, who had surgical resection for complete removal of the
tumor
and no demonstrable metastases following surgery, were administered Levamisole (p.o., 150 mg per day, two days per week) and maintained on this dose for at least six months. Of this group, drug therapy was discontinued in four patients because of severe "flu-like" syndromes leaving a group of 15 patients for detailed analysis. T-lymphocyte percentages and levels, cAMP levels in the lymphocytes and a battery of skin tests for recall antigens were evaluated following surgery and at various intervals during immunotherapy. Patients who responded well to the treatment showed increased levels of T-lymphocytes and increased cAMP levels, whereas non-responders had low T-cell levels and low cAMP levels. Also positive skin test reactions were observed in most patients who responded well to immunotherapy, although this was the least reliable indicator of patient response. Eight of the nine patients in the
melanoma
group have responded well clinically, whereas five of the six squamous cell carcinoma patients have developed recurrences.
...
PMID:Immunocompetence of cancer patients treated with Levamisole. 18 94
Samples of 35 tumors from the head and neck region (25 squamous cell, 2 basal cell, 5 parotid, 3
melanoma
, and 1 lymphosarcoma) were cultured after dispersement with either trypsin or collagenase treatment. Growth was established in 14 (40%). Cultured
tumor
cells were then used as target cells in in vitro assays of patients' cellular and humoral immunity to their own or similar tumors. Preliminary data suggest this may be a reliable method of monitoring responses in patients receiving immunotherapy for head and neck malignancies.
...
PMID:Tissue-cultured head and neck tumors: their use in in vitro assays of immune response. 19 78
There is considerable evidence to suggest that macrophages participate in host resistance to the development and spread of cancer. We have, therefore, studied monocytemacrophage function in humans and animals with neoplasms. Approximately 60% of patients with various types of cancer were found to have abnormal monocyte chemotactic responsiveness in vitro, and abnormal chemotaxis was an indicator of poor prognosis in patients with
melanoma
. By studying patients before and after surgery, it was found that abnormal chemotactic responses normalized within weeks after removal of malignant tumors, indicating that a
neoplasm
itself might affect the host's monocyte chemotactic responsiveness. Subsequent studies using transplantable neoplasms in mice substantiated this hypothesis in that macrophage accumulation in vivo as well as macrophage chemotactic responsiveness in vitro was depressed in animals during the early phases of tumor growth. This depression of macrophage function could be attributed to a low-molecular-weight factor contained in murine neoplasms, which when given to normal mice was extremely potent in depressing peritoneal macrophage accumulation and chemotaxis but, paradoxically, enhanced phagocytosis. The serum of
tumor
-bearing mice also contained potent inhibitory activity for macrophage accumulation. In contrast to the effects on macrophages, granulocyte accumulation in vivo and chemotaxis in vitro was not depressed by the presence of a
neoplasm
or the administration of the factor from neoplasms. By releasing factors which depress macrophage migratory function, neoplasms may protect themselves from immunologically mediated host destruction during the early phases of tumor growth.
...
PMID:Macrophage migratory dysfunction in cancer. A mechanism for subversion of surveillance. 19 6
The effect of systemic administration of 16,16-dimethyl prostaglandin E2-methyl ester (di-M-PGE2) on the growth of B-16
melanoma
tumors has been studied in C57BL/6J mice. Daily i.p. injection of 5 mu of di-M-PGE2 commencing on the day of
tumor
inoculation with 10(5) and 10(6) viable cells delayed appearance of tumors; for the smaller
tumor
inoculum, it also increased median survival among treated mice from 23 to 33 days. Di-M-PGE2 treatment of mice with established tumors caused significant inhibition of tumor growth, as measured by a number of parameters including
tumor
diameters and volumes. At the time of sacrifice, di-M-PGE2-treated mice had tumors that were an average of 32% smaller (by weight), contained 60% fewer
melanoma
cells, and had higher concentrations of cyclic adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate and cyclic guanosine 3':5'-monophosphate (+225% and +100%, respectively).
...
PMID:Inhibition of B-16 melanoma growth in vivo by a synthetic analog of prostaglandin E2. 19 22
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