Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The proteolytic processes are thought to be the critical point in tumor invasion and metastasis, mainly by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and serine proteases. We measured the activity of MMP-2 from 28 normal, 12 benign and 126 breast cancer tissues using gelatin zymography. Inactive MMP-2 (72 kD) was expressed in 53.6% of the normal and 66.6% of the cancer tissues, respectively (P = 0.77), while active MMP-2 (62 kD) was expressed in 28.6% and 73.0%, respectively (P = 0.003). The enzymatic activity of active MMP-2 (62 kD) measured in the gel band area was 4.0 +/- 7.2 mm2 in normal breasts, 7.7 +/- 9.8 mm2 in benign breast diseases, 9.5 +/- 8.5 mm2 in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and 12.0 +/- 13.7 mm2 in invasive cancers. The MMP-2 activation ratio (62 kD/62 kD + 72 kD) was 0.12 +/- 0.18 in normal tissues, 0.10 +/- 0.20 in benign diseases, 0.61 +/- 0.22 in DCIS, and 0.50 +/- 0.28 in invasive cancers. In conclusion, MMP-2 activation was the main cause of the increased 62 kD MMP-2 activity during the early phase of breast cancer, while production of MMP-2 supplemented the increased 62 kD activity in the late phase. We suggest, therefore, that these differential expressions of MMP-2 activation and production during the different stages of breast cancer progression are potential therapeutic targets for biological or gene therapy under the concept of stage-oriented cancer treatment.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1996 Nov
PMID:Sequential activation and production of matrix metalloproteinase-2 during breast cancer progression. 897 May 81

Annexins are a family of structurally related, water-soluble proteins that have calcium- and phospholipid-binding domains. Annexin I is thought to be involved in cell proliferation and differentiation and has recently been shown to be expressed on the surfaces of lymphoma cells where it acts as an endothelial cell adhesion molecule. To evaluate the expression of annexin I in relation to human breast cancer development and progression we used breast biopsy tissues. Immunohistochemical analysis of annexin I in paraffin-embedded ductal epithelial cells of various human breast tissues indicated that this annexin was not demonstrable in the ductal luminal cells of normal breast tissues (n = 11) and benign tumors (n = 10) (except for one ductal adenoma) but was generally expressed in various types of breast cancers, including noninvasive ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), invasive and metastatic breast tumors (n = 33). The results suggest that annexin I expression might correlate with malignant breast cancer progression but it is most likely involved at an early stage of human breast cancer development.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1997 Mar
PMID:Differential expression of annexin I in human mammary ductal epithelial cells in normal and benign and malignant breast tissues. 906 91

From 1970 to 1992, 31 pure ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the male breast treated in 19 French Regional Cancer Centres were reviewed. They represent 5% of all breast cancers treated in men in the same period. The median age was 58 years, but 6 patients were younger than 40 years. TNM classification (UICC, 1978) showed 12 T0 (discovered only by bloody nipple discharge), 10 T1, 5 T2 and four unclassified tumours (Tx). 11 patients (35.5%) had clinical gynecomastia, and three (10%) had a family history of breast cancer. 6 patients underwent lumpectomy, and 25 mastectomy. Axillary dissection was performed in 19 cases. 6 cases received postoperative irradiation. 15 out of 31 lesions were of the papillary subtype, pure or associated with a cribriform component. The size of the 12 measured lesions varied from 3 to 45 mm. All lymph nodes sampled were negative. With a median follow-up of 83 months, 4 patients (13%) presented a local relapse (LR), respectively, at 12, 27, 36 and 55 months. 3 of these patients had been initially treated by lumpectomy. In one case LR was still in situ, but already infiltrating in the 3 others. Radical salvage surgery was performed in 3 cases, but one patient developed metastases and died 30 months later. The last patient was treated by multiple local excisions and tamoxifen. One 43-year-old patient developed a contralateral DCIS and three others developed a metachronous cancer. The aetiology and risk factors of male breast cancer remain unknown. Gynecomastia, which implies an imbalance between androgen and oestrogen, may be a predisposing factor. As in women, DCIS in the male breast has a good prognosis. Total mastectomy without axillary dissection is the basic treatment. Frequently, the first symptom is a bloody nipple discharge. The age of occurrence is younger than for infiltrating carcinoma, suggesting that DCIS is the first step in the development of breast cancer.
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PMID:Ductal carcinoma in situ of the male breast. Analysis of 31 cases. 907 92

Mammographic screening produces markedly smaller breast cancers with fewer axillary lymph nodes and more ductal carcinoma in situ. Over the past 25 years at the New England Deaconess Hospital, the mean maximum diameter of breast cancers has decreased by 10% every 5 years and is now only 2.1 cm. The median maximum diameter in the years from 1989 to 1993 is only 1.5 cm. Axillary lymph node metastases also are declining progressively. This continuing decline in mean and median maximum diameters and incidence of axillary lymph node metastases shows no signs of abating at the present time. Universal mammographic screening of appropriately aged women should be a public health goal to further this trend towards markedly earlier breast cancer detection with much higher survival and new opportunities for modified therapy.
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PMID:New era in breast cancer. Impact of screening on disease presentation. 910 7

Indium-111 octreotide and thallium-201 scintigraphic studies were compared in 21 patients (16 with palpable and five with non-palpable lesions) suspected of having breast malignancies on the basis of mammography. Early (15 min) and late (3 h) 201Tl (111 MBq) and 4-h and 24-h 111In-octreotide (111-148 MBq) static planar anterior images (matrix 256 x 256) were obtained on separate days. Images were evaluated both visually and quantitatively. Biopsy was performed following the imaging studies. Histopathology revealed 17 breast carcinomas (15 cases of invasive ductal carcinoma, one mucinous adenocarcinoma and one intraductal carcinoma) and four benign breast lesions (two fibroadenomas, one abscess and one case of fat necrosis). The means histopathological tumour size (mean largest diameter) was 3.38 +/- 1.9 cm. 111In-octreotide detected 16 of the 17 breast cancers (94%) while 201Tl detected 13 of them (76%). Both 111In-octreotide and 201Tl missed one non-palpable carcinoma showing only an isolated cluster of microcalcifications on mammography. The smallest tumour size detected by both agents 1.5 x 1.5 cm. Of the four benign lesions, only the breast abscess revealed both 201Tl and 111In-octreotide uptake. 111In-octreotide scan also showed tracer uptake in five of the six patients with histologically proven axillary metastases, while four of these six patients showed 201Tl uptake. The tumour/background (T/B) ratios of late 111In-octreotide and 201Tl images were 1.71 +/- 0.38 and 1.46 +/- 0.30 respectively (P = 0.039). In this preliminary study, 111In-octreotide yielded more favourable results than 201Tl in the detection of breast carcinomas. However, the diagnostic efficacy of 111In-octreotide imaging needs to be investigated in larger patient series.
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PMID:Comparison of indium-111 octreotide and thallium-201 scintigraphy in patients mammographically suspected of having breast cancer: preliminary results. 914 70

Thymosin beta15 is a newly discovered 5300-Da protein that binds actin monomers and inhibits actin polymerization and might thus increase cellular motility. Thymosin beta15 is upregulated at both the mRNA and protein levels in prostate cell lines in a manner directly related to their capacity to metastasize. We hypothesize that because this protein is upregulated in cells with a propensity to metastasize, it might be a useful prognostic marker in breast cancer. Because this is a newly described protein, neither the subcellular localization of thymosin beta15 or its expression in breast cancer has been examined. We describe the use of an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody to show that within breast epithelium, thymosin beta15 is localized diffusely throughout the cytoplasm and that thymosin beta15 is upregulated in malignant (compared with benign) breast tissue. In contrast to the prostate model, thymosin beta15 is upregulated in nonmetastatic breast cancer and even ductal carcinoma in situ (compared with benign breast tissue), and, consequently, it might represent a potential early marker for breast malignancy. Additional studies are needed to evaluate the precise role and prognostic value of thymosin beta15 in breast cancer.
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PMID:Localization and quantitation of expression of the cell motility-related protein thymosin beta15 in human breast tissue. 938 61

Recent experimental evidence obtained in Scid mice has suggested that the metastatic process is in large part epigenetically regulated and undergoes partial reversion once the metastatic process is completed: the metastatic colonies become more engaged in the process of growing in situ than actively metastasizing. Based on this experimental evidence, examples were sought of metastatic human cancers where similar reversion to an in situ growth state was occurring. Review of 200 cases of metastatic human breast cancer revealed a 21 per cent incidence of reversion to a ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) growth pattern within axillary nodal metastases. The revertant DCIS areas were characterized by an intact and circumferential basement membrane, as demonstrated by extracellular laminin and type IV collagen immunoreactivity. These revertant DCIS areas could be distinguished from primary DCIS, however, by the absence of surrounding myoepithelial cells in the former, identified in the latter by their positive maspin, S-100, and smooth muscle actin immunoreactivity. The pattern of revertant DCIS, poorly differentiated (comedo) (13 per cent), intermediate (non-comedo) (6 per cent), or well-differentiated (non-comedo) (2%), exhibited complete 100 per cent concordance with the primary DCIS pattern. The concordance of histological patterns held true for even the subtypes of DCIS determined by architectural pattern, such as the micropapillary or cribriform subtypes. Nuclear size by digital image analysis and Her-2/neu, p53, and Ki-67 status in the revertant DCIS also exhibited complete concordance with the primary DCIS counterparts. Cases exhibiting a revertant DCIS pattern tended to be ER-negative/EGFR-positive and exhibited significant nodal involvement (mean number, 9; mean area, 90 per cent) compared with cases lacking a revertant pattern (mean number, 4; mean area, 15 per cent) (P < 0.01) These findings suggest that reversion of the metastatic phenotype may also be occurring within autochthonous human metastasis.
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PMID:'Revertant' DCIS in human axillary breast carcinoma metastases. 939 32

Radiographic imaging of the breast began in the early years of the twentieth century. Continuous advances in film quality, energy sources, targets, grids, and filters have all contributed to superior image resolution. Federal quality standards now regulate screening mammography, and mass screening for breast cancer has become widely accepted in the United States. Wider application of screening has resulted in a dramatic apparent increase in incidence rates of breast cancer; a large proportion of this increase is in ductal carcinoma in situ. During the past 30 years, nine prospective, randomized trials to evaluate the ability of screening mammography to reduce mortality from breast cancer have been completed. These trials show a 30% reduction in mortality for women ages 50-69 years, but the benefit to women aged 40-49 years remains uncertain. This uncertainty is largely attributable to the lack of properly designed and conducted studies to evaluate screening efficacy in younger women. Although there is no biological reason to predict poor screening performance in the younger age groups, the sensitivity of screening mammography is lower in younger women. Additional data suggest that screening intervals longer than 12 months are ineffective in women younger than 50 years. With shorter screening intervals, the cost associated with screening mammography is comparable to other life-saving measures widely applied in the population. New breast imaging techniques hold promise for superior image quality, but they remain investigational as tools for mass screening. Until primary prevention of breast cancer is a reality, mass screening remains available to reduce mortality from breast cancer.
Cancer Metastasis Rev
PMID:Breast cancer screening. 943 38

A malignant phyllodes tumour with a noninvasive ductal carcinoma component is reported. The patient was an 80-year-old Japanese woman with a breast tumour detected by routine physical examination. A simple mastectomy was performed. The excised tumour was 10.5 x 9.4 x 5.4 cm in size and bulged into the skin with ulceration. The macroscopic appearance was that of a phyllodes tumour. Histologically the tumour consisted mainly of stromal components with a leaf-like structure lined by atypical ductal epithelium. The epithelial component showed gradual evolution to intraductal papillary carcinoma in a few areas. The stromal component was composed mainly of fibrosarcoma with areas of osteosarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma. Neither stromal invasion of intraductal carcinoma nor transition between the stromal and epithelial elements was seen. Three months after the operation, death occurred, with multiple pulmonary and subcutaneous metastases. This case probably represents malignant change in both the stromal and the epithelial components of a phyllodes tumour. Since the two elements were independent, the possibility that a phyllodes tumour may be one of the origins of true carcinosarcoma is raised.
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PMID:Malignant phyllodes tumour with a noninvasive ductal carcinoma component. 946 93

A 44-year-old woman presented with a right huge axillary mass. Both mammography and ultrasonography revealed a primary cancer of 2.8 cm maximum diameter in the right breast and metastases in the axillary lymph nodes, both being confirmed by aspiration cytology as ductal carcinoma. Right standard radical mastectomy with level III axillary lymph node dissection was carried out. Pathologically, the tumor was diagnosed as ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion (DCISM), histologic grade 3. The area of stromal invasion measured 1 mm at its widest point. Sixteen of the 17 resected axillary lymph nodes contained metastases, including six level III lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical studies of the tumor revealed overexpression of p53 protein, but not that of c-erbB-2 protein. The frequency of lymph node metastases from DCISM is reported to be very low. Therefore, the present case with extensive involvement of level III lymph nodes was unusual.
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PMID:Microinvasive breast carcinoma with extensive involvement of level III axillary lymph nodes: a case report. 949 Nov 42


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