Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (multiple myeloma)
36,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three patients with cardiac tamponade caused by malignancy were treated by pericardiocentesis with intrapericardial OK-432 instillation. The underlying disease was adenocarcinoma of unknown origin, breast cancer and multiple myeloma. Under electrocardiographic monitoring, a polyethylene catheter with several side holes was inserted into the pericardial sac, and after a maximal volume of fluid was withdrawn, 5 KE of OK-432 diluted in 20 ml of saline was instilled through the catheter. All the patients who received intrapericardial OK-432 therapy obtained complete control of pericardial effusion for more than 30 days. The side effects were fever, chills and chest pain which were easily controlled by antipyretics.
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PMID:Intrapericardial instillation of OK-432 for the management of malignant pericardial effusion: report of three cases. 272 48

A 60-year-old man presenting with cough, dyspnea and chest pain was found to have plasma cell myeloma with pulmonary involvement. Cytologic smears of a bronchial washing showed clusters and sheets of cells with vague plasmacytoid features. Prominent nucleoli, which were present in most of the cells, and occasional glandlike patterns suggested an adenocarcinoma, thus causing a differential diagnostic problem.
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PMID:Cytology of plasma cell myeloma in bronchial washing. 275 Apr 41

Twenty cases of metastatic neoplasms in the breast were identified in a series of 1,034 fine-needle aspirations (FNAs) of the breast, of which 389 were malignant. Patients with breast carcinomas in whom metastasis to the contralateral breast developed were excluded from this study. This series consisted of 17 women and 3 men, ranging in age from 28 to 63 years (mean, 49 years). The tumors included oat cell carcinoma (three), melanoma (three), ovarian serous carcinoma (one), bronchogenic adenocarcinoma and squamous carcinoma (four and two, respectively), lymphoma (two), carcinoid (two), transitional cell carcinoma (one), plasma cell myeloma (one), and rhabdomyosarcoma (one). In two patients, the breast mass was the first manifestation of an extramammary cancer (two adenocarcinoma of the lung). Eleven patients died of disseminated cancer shortly after the breast metastasis was diagnosed. In most cases, the aspirates displayed the cytologic features characteristic of the primary tumors, thereby establishing the metastatic nature of the neoplasm. In four cases (two carcinoids, one myeloma, and one rhabdomyosarcoma), the cytologic features were difficult to differentiate from a primary breast carcinoma; however, the final diagnosis was established by electron microscopic examination and immunocytochemical studies on the aspirates. One case (adenocarcinoma of the lung) was misdiagnosed as primary breast carcinoma on both FNA and mastectomy specimen. Because metastatic neoplasms in the breast may mimic primary breast tumors, the authors recommend the following: (1) Evaluation of FNA of breast should be done with complete knowledge of the patient's clinical history. (2) The possibility of metastasis should be suspected in lesions with unusual cytologic patterns. (3) Ancillary studies on FNA can be helpful in interpreting selected cases.
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PMID:Fine-needle aspiration cytology of metastatic neoplasms in the breast. 275 Jul 5

At the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (Houston), Listeria monocytogenes was cultured from 14 patients between 1980 and 1987. The case records of 11 of these patients were reviewed. Underlying malignancies included acute leukemia (three), lymphoma (two), myeloma (one), adenocarcinoma of colon (two), carcinoma of breast (one), carcinoma of lung (one), and Kaposi's sarcoma associated with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (one). Listeria monocytogenes was cultured from blood (eight patients), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (two patients), and from both blood and CSF in one patient. All patients were receiving immunosuppressive therapy including corticosteroids in seven. An absolute neutrophil count of less than 1000/mm3 was noted in five. Bacteremia was the predominant type of infection and ten patients responded to antimicrobial therapy.
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PMID:Spectrum and outcome of microbiologically documented listeria monocytogenes infections in cancer patients. 279 Jul 6

To study the risk of death and causes of death among female patients with tuberculosis (TB), a total of 1,083 female patients who diagnosed as having active pulmonary TB and newly registered into the Nagoya TB registry between 1979-1981 were followed up till the end of 1983. During follow-up period 138 deaths (12.7%) were observed, a significantly higher rate than expected from the general population. Observed deaths (O) from all types of cancer (O/E ratio = 2.5), lung (6.4) and colorectal cancers (5.0), were significantly higher than that which was expected (E). The number of deaths from TB was naturally high (O/E ratio = 40.0, p less than 0.001). Malignant lymphoma and multiple myeloma also showed high relative risk. The smoking rate among the patients was 14%, about the same as with the general population. Excessive high rates of death from lung cancer were observed both among smoking and non-smoking cancer patients. Non-smokers showed a high proportion (60%) of adenocarcinoma. The proportion of the use of antituberculous drugs during the past five years was not different between the lung cancer group and the non-lung cancer group. Patients who died from cirrhosis of the liver showed more frequent use of antituberculous drugs than the others. Factors causing excess incidence of colorectal cancer remain unknown. It was suggested that some immunologic disorders in TB patients may play some role in the development of cancer.
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PMID:Prognosis of female patients with pulmonary tuberculosis. 281 Sep 20

A murine monoclonal antibody, 1C5, was produced by fusion of spleen cells obtained from mice immunized with CAC-1, a human cell line of adenocarcinoma derived from uterine cervix, and NS/1 myeloma cells. 1C5 can be used for the staining of routine formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissue sections. 1C5-defined antigen was found to have a molecular weight of 26,000. The 1C5-defined antigen was resistant to neuraminidase and trypsin treatment, but sensitive to periodate treatment, indicating that an epitope of the 1C5-defined antigen is a carbohydrate moiety. Immunohistochemical study using immunoperoxidase staining demonstrated that 1C5 reacted with 87% of adenocarcinomas of the uterine cervix, 39% of endometrial carcinomas of the uterus, 100% of ovarian mucinous cystadenocarcinomas, 43% of ovarian serous cystadenocarcinomas, 45% of adenocarcinomas of the colon, and 40% of gastric adenocarcinomas, thus showing the broad reactivity to adenocarcinoma cells of various origins. However, 1C5 did not show any reactivity to ectocervix epithelium, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, or squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix. In addition, adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix exhibited strong cytoplasmic reactivity with 1C5, whereas endometrial carcinoma of the uterus showed the luminal reactivity. 1C5 also reacts with 95% ethanol-fixed malignant cells in cervical smears.
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PMID:New monoclonal antibody, 1C5, reactive with human cervical adenocarcinoma of the uterus, with immunodiagnostic potential. 305 7

In summary, carcinoma is the most frequent cancer that metastasizes to the skin; lung cancer in men and breast cancer in women. Clinically distinctive patterns of cutaneous metastasis of epithelial origin include alopecia neoplastica, pulsatile nodules, Sister Mary Joseph's nodules, morpheaform, and cellulitis-like lesions. Biopsying these lesions reveals adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, or anaplastic carcinoma. The type of histologic pattern seen can be a clue to the organ of origin giving rise to the cutaneous metastasis. Skin that is damaged allows for circulating malignant cells, often of epithelial or leukemic origin, to lodge and proliferate locally (inflammatory oncotaxis). The commonest form of leukemia to affect the skin of elderly males is chronic lymphocytic leukemia. However, when leukemia involves the mucous membranes, acute myeloid leukemia (acute monocytic and acute myelomonocytic leukemia) is the most likely diagnosis. When papules, nodules, or plaques develop on the head, neck, or torso in a middle-aged male accompanied by lymphadenopathy, there must be a high index of suspicion that these lesions are metastatic lymphomatous deposits. Definitive histologic diagnosis on a skin biopsy specimen is difficult. In this situation, it is best to rely on histologic patterns seen in lymphoid tissue along with cellular marker studies. An elderly patient having bone pain, anemia, elevated blood calcium level, and renal failure along with purplish or skin-colored nodules and plaques on the trunk has a good chance of having multiple myeloma. Biopsying these lesions is most certain to reveal atypical plasma cells, and blood immunoelectrophoresis will demonstrate characteristic monoclonal gammopathy. There are two malignancies seen in children under 3 years of age that often times affect the skin in a characteristic fashion. Letterer-Siwe disease, which is distinguished from other histocytic disorders by its cell of origin, the Langerhans cell, clinically shows maculopapular and erosive lesions distributed in a seborrheic pattern. Neuroblastoma derived from cells of the neural crest demonstrates clinically widespread bluish papulonodules. Kaposi's sarcoma, a multifocal vascular malignancy, has a wide spectrum of clinical expression. Those patients who are immunocompromised secondary to concomitant disease or immunosuppressive therapy are more susceptible to a disseminated fulminant course accompanied by opportunistic infection. In conclusion, although specific signs of internal malignancy are less common than nonspecific ones, they are just as important; if the clinician managing the cancer patient is familiar with these clues to internal disease, proper patient management will ensue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Specific cutaneous manifestations of internal malignancy. 307 47

The rare case is reported of a cylindrical cell epithelioma developing in the base of an ileal diverticulum. This infrequent association was further complicated by the fact that the patient was in the early stages of Kahler's disease. After presentation of the case the literature on ileojejunal adenocarcinoma associated with small intestine diverticula is reviewed.
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PMID:[Adenocarcinoma developing from an ileal diverticulum. Apropos of a case]. 311 71

A rat hybridoma producing IgM monoclonal antibody (MAb) GP21:56 was generated with specificity for a high-molecular-weight, mucin-like glycoprotein (gp580) present on highly metastatic 13762NF rat mammary adenocarcinoma cells. The hybridoma was made by fusing rat Y3 Ag1.2.3 myeloma cells with spleen cells from a rat immunized i.d. with purified gp580. The gp580 appeared to be of low immunogenicity in syngeneic F344 rats because a total of 27 fusions were required to produce one hybridoma with specificity for this glycoprotein. Immunoblotting of purified gp580 after electrophoresis in 1% agarose and antibody-binding assays using purified gp580 linked to microtiter plates confirmed that MAb GP21:56 bound specifically to gp580. Other MAbs made against breast mucins were negative for gp580 reactivity. Enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assays (ELISA) and radiolabelled antibody binding assays demonstrated that MAb GP21:56 bound to 13762NF adenocarcinoma cell lines and clones in relation to their spontaneous metastatic potentials; significantly more MAb GP21:56 bound to highly metastatic MTLn3 cells than to low metastatic MTC cells, and MAb GP21:56 showed little reactivity towards the majority of other cell lines tested, whether of rodent or of human origin. Kinetic binding studies indicated that MAb GP21:56 does not have a high affinity for gp580 but, once bound, it shows high avidity for this sialogalactoprotein. Localization studies using frozen tissue sections of 13762NF tumors indicated that MAb GP21:56 reacts with tumor cells grown in vivo in an analogous manner to in vitro cultured cells. Using immunoperoxidase techniques, less than 50% of the highly metastatic MTLn3 tumor cells were stained, whereas approximately 20% of the intermediate metastatic MTF7 and MTLn2 cells and less than 10% of low metastatic MTC and MTPa cells were stained with MAb GP21:56. The cell-to-cell reactivity was heterogeneous and mainly associated with the tumor-cell surface and extracellular matrix.
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PMID:Development and characterization of a syngeneic monoclonal antibody to a rat mammary tumor metastasis-associated mucin-like cell-surface antigen (gp580). 317 31

Human embryonal carcinoma cells sometimes display the developmental potential of early embryonic stem cells. While available data do not clearly identify a counterpart of these tumor cells in normal development, previous comparisons of human embryonal carcinoma and yolk sac carcinomas indicated that these cell types are closely related, and suggested that embryonal carcinoma cells might resemble the progenitors of extraembryonic endoderm. To analyse further cell-differentiation lineage in these tumors, we produced monoclonal antibodies to cytostructurally associated antigens of human embryonal carcinoma cells. Spleen cells from mice immunized with a detergent-insoluble extract of cultured human embryonal carcinoma cells were fused to NS-1 myeloma cells, and hybridoma supernatants were screened by indirect immunofluorescence on the immunizing cell line, then on a panel of cell lines derived from human embryonal carcinomas, yolk sac carcinomas, and a range of neoplastic and normal tissues. Monoclonal antibody GCTM-1 stained the nuclei of all human cells tested and served as a positive control; this antibody immunoprecipitated proteins of 85 and 66 k Da from human embryonal carcinoma cells. GCTM-2 recognized an epitope on a 200-k Da extracellular protein present on the surface of embryonal carcinoma cells, and stained the surface of visceral yolk sac-type carcinoma and colorectal carcinoma cells as well. Enzymatic analysis of carbohydrate residues on the GCTM-2 antigen revealed that it was a keratan sulphate proteoglycan, and suggested that the epitope recognized by the antibody lies on the core protein. In immunoblots, antibody GCTM-3 bound to a 57-k Da cytoskeletal protein expressed in human embryonal carcinoma. This antibody decorated filamentous arrays in cell lines from human embryonal carcinoma, visceral yolk sac carcinoma, parietal yolk sac carcinoma (endodermal sinus tumour), and adenocarcinoma and large cell carcinoma of the lung. Antibody GCTM-4 recognized a determinant present on a 69-k Da polypeptide, associated with a component of the lysosomal compartment, which was expressed in embryonal carcinoma cells, but no other cell type tested. The results with this antibody panel thus allow distinction between human embryonal carcinoma and yolk sac carcinoma, but provide further evidence of a close relationship between these cell types.
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PMID:Analysis of cell-differentiation lineage in human teratomas using new monoclonal antibodies to cytostructural antigens of embryonal carcinoma cells. 324 84


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