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

In search of biomarkers that predict of human prostate cancer progression, we hypothesized that these markers must be expressed in prostatic epithelial cells during multi-step prostate carcinogenesis. Since both genetic and epigenetic factors have been implicated in human prostate cancer development, two osseous-metastatic experimental models were developed in our laboratory, one based on gene transfection and the other on stromal-epithelial interaction studies. In the genetic model, PC-3 cells transfected with point-mutated c-erbB-2/neu oncogene subsequently acquired the potential to metastasize from the prostate to soft tissues and the skeleton. In the epigenetic model, sublines derived from the parental androgen-dependent LNCaP cell line metastasized from the primary tumor to the lymph node and bone. Cells with known lineage relationships were cloned from both the primary and the metastatic tumors and were characterized extensively using cellular, biochemical, immunohistochemical, and molecular techniques. Relevant stage-specific biomarkers associated with prostate cancer progression in these two models were defined and used to evaluate human prostate tissues obtained from the clinic. In this communication, we focused our discussion on the potential importance of c-erbB-2/neu oncogene, vimentin, hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor and its receptor, c-met oncogene, tumor angiogenesis and neuroendocrine factors as biomarkers for human prostate cancer progression.
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PMID:Biomarkers associated with prostate cancer progression. 752 53

Angiogenesis, the induction of new capillaries and venules, has been associated with tumor growth. Increased tumor size and new vessel growth may further the opportunity for tumor cells to enter the circulation and potentiate metastatic disease. To investigate if tumor angiogenesis could serve as a prognostic factor in cervical carcinoma, we counted microvessels (capillaries and venules) in 29 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. Surgical specimens were stained for endothelial cells specifically with Factor VIII to identify all vessels. The microvessels were counted by light microscopy (per 200 x field) in tumor sections with the highest population of microvessels. This was performed by two investigators without knowledge of patient outcome or extent of disease. Microvessel counts in patients with squamous cell carcinoma were significantly different from those of control subjects: 56 +/- 28.9 and 16.3 +/- 3.3 (P = 0.013). There was no correlation between microvessel count and node status, parametrial involvement, depth of invasion, or gross disease. Microvessel count was significantly correlated with vascular space involvement (P = 0.017). Four patients who developed recurrent disease within 1 year had high microvessel counts and yet were node negative and VSI negative at surgery. As shown by Folkman in breast cancer, angiogenesis may also be an independent predictor for recurrent disease in squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. Microvessel counts could be of prognostic value in patients who do not have other risk factors for disease recurrence.
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PMID:Tumor angiogenesis as a prognostic factor in cervical carcinoma. 753 19

The emergence of new cytotoxic agents and techniques for treatment of systemic disease as single modalities or in combination with irradiation and surgery will impact on the use of such agents in the management of systemic breast cancer. Metastatic breast carcinoma, unlike other solid tumors, is highly responsive to chemotherapy, response rates of 50 to 70% have been reported consistently, although there has not been a significant improvement on long-term survival of these patients in the last ten years. New therapeutic approaches include cytotoxic and hormonal agents, growth and differentiation factors, monoclonal antibodies, hematopoietic stem cell support, conquest of tumor cell resistance by MDR-modulation, genetic manipulation, identification of new targets on the tumor surface, synthesis of target-oriented designer-drugs and inhibition of tumor angiogenesis. In breast cancer the tumor growth correlates with vascularization and angiogenesis. Tumor angiogenesis is stimulated by the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Microvessel density is a significant predictor of survival among node-negative women, who are at risk for having occult metastases at presentation. These patients could then be given systemic adjuvant therapy. Animal experiments show promising inhibition of tumor growth in nude mice after application of antibodies against VEGF. Other methods of manipulation of molecular mechanisms of angiogenesis are under investigation.
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PMID:[Are there alternative forms of therapy in breast carcinoma? Status and perspectives for the treatment of metastasized breast carcinoma]. 753 44

Linomide, a quinoline-3-carboxamide, has growth-inhibitory effects against a series of Dunning R-3327 rat prostatic cancers in vivo [Ichikawa et al.: Cancer Res 52:3022-3028, 1992]. In addition, we have demonstrated that daily linomide treatment can inhibit angiogenic responses in nontumor-bearing rats and reduce tumor blood flow in tumor-bearing rats [Vukanovic et al.: Cancer Res 53:1833, 1993]. In the present study we have demonstrated that the reduced tumor blood flow is due to linomide's ability to inhibit tumor angiogenesis, as documented by decreased number of blood vessels in prostatic carcinomas growing in rats treated daily with linomide. Due to linomide's ability to inhibit tumor angiogenesis, and since tumor angiogenesis is required not only for the growth of the primary cancer but also for its ability to metastasize, the effect of linomide on metastasis was directly tested using a quantitation metastasis assay. These in vivo experiments demonstrated that daily linomide treatment decreased by 3-fold the extent of dissemination of cancer cells to the lungs. To test if this antimetastatic response is due to direct effects of linomide on the metastatic cells themselves as well as an induced effect upon inhibition of tumor angiogenesis, additional studies were performed. These studies demonstrated that linomide is not converted in vivo to metabolite(s) which are directly cytotoxic or cytostatic to the prostatic cancer cells themselves. These studies also demonstrated that linomide does not decrease the attachment, migration, or invasive abilities of metastatic cancer cells. These results suggest that the major mechanism for the antitumor and antimetastatic effects of linomide is via its inhibition of tumor angiogenesis. Additional studies have demonstrated that in vivo linomide treatment results in the apoptotic death of thymocytes. This cytotoxic effect is not required for linomide's antitumor effect, nor is it due to elevated plasma levels of glucocorticoid.
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PMID:Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis and the therapeutic ability of linomide against rat prostatic cancers. 753 63

Neovascularization of tumor tissue (tumor angiogenesis) is considered essential for tumor growth, proliferation and eventually metastasis. Microvessel density or count, a measure of tumor angiogenesis, correlates with clinical outcome in skin, breast, lung and prostate carcinomas. To determine whether an association of tumor angiogenesis and nodal metastasis exists in invasive bladder cancer, microvessel counts in 41 primary invasive stages (T2 to 4,NX,M0) bladder cancers were assessed. Microvessels were identified by immunostaining of endothelial cells for factor VIII-related antigen. Microvessels were scored in selected areas showing active neovascularization, either counting a 200 x field (0.74 mm.2) or by using a 10 x 10 square ocular grid (0.16 mm.2). The microvessel count correlated with the presence of occult lymph node metastases (p < 0.0001) by both techniques. The mean microvessel count in 27 patients without lymph node metastases was 56.2 microvessels per 200 x field (standard deviation [SD] 29.5, range 7 to 130) or 28.6 microvessels per grid (SD 14.4, range 4 to 65). The 14 patients with histologically proved lymph node metastases showed mean 138.1 microvessels per 200 x fields (SD 37.9, range 82 to 202) or 74.7 microvessels per grid (SD 14.4, range 43 to 115). Good correlation was noted between area and grid counting (r = 0.97). Tumor T stage, grade and the presence of vascular or lymphatic invasion did not correlate with the presence of lymph node metastases (p = 0.41, 0.59 and 0.26, respectively). Microvessel count may provide important information regarding the risk of occult metastasis in patients with invasive bladder carcinomas.
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PMID:Tumor angiogenesis correlates with lymph node metastases in invasive bladder cancer. 753 69

Human prostatic cancer cells have a remarkably low rate of proliferation even when they have metastasized to the bone and have become androgen independent (Berges et al., Clin. Cancer Res., 1:473-480, 1995). Due to this low proliferation, patients with such androgen-independent metastatic prostatic cancer cells are rarely treated successfully with the presently available chemotherapeutic agents. Therefore, new approaches are urgently needed which are not dependent on the rate of cancer cell proliferation for their effectiveness. One such approach is to inhibit the angiogenic response within localized and metastatic cancer deposits, since the resultant hypoxia-induced tumor cell death does not require cell proliferation. We have previously demonstrated that the quinoline-3-carboxamide, linomide, is an p.o. active agent which inhibits tumor angiogenesis and thus blood flow in a variety of rat prostatic cancers independent of their growth rate, androgen sensitivity, or metastatic ability. Because of its antiangiogenic effects, linomide treatment induces the hypoxic death of rat prostatic cancer cells, thus inhibiting their net growth and metastases. To determine whether human prostatic cancer cells are similarly sensitive to hypoxia-induced death caused by linomide inhibition of tumor angiogenesis, androgen-independent TSU and PC-3 human prostatic cancer cells were xenotransplanted into SCID mice that were either untreated or treated p.o. with linomide. These studies demonstrated that linomide treatment decreases microvessel density in both androgen-independent human prostatic cancers. Microvessel density was decreased from 1.8 +/- 0.4% of the total area in control tumors to 1.0 +/- 0.2% in linomide-treated TSU tumors [i.e., a 44% decrease in microvessel density (P < 0.05)]. Similarly, a 56% decrease (P < 0.05) was observed in the microvessel density of PC-3 tumors (i.e., 2.7 +/- 0.8% of the area in control tumor versus 1.2 +/- 0.2% in the linomide-treated tumors). This inhibition of angiogenesis increased cell death in both TSU and PC-3 cancer cells. This is reflected in both an increase in the area of necrosis and an increase in the apoptotic index in non-necrotic areas. In untreated TSU tumors, 40 +/- 2% of tumor volume was necrotic. Linomide treatment increased this necrotic percentage to 59 +/- 2% [i.e., 48% increase (P < 0.05)]. Linomide therapy also increased apoptotic cell death in non-necrotic tumor areas. In the untreated TSU tumors, 2.9 +/- 0.6% of tumor cells were apoptotic in the non-necrotic areas, and in the linomide-treated TSU tumors this percentage increased to 3.6 +/- 0.4% [i.e., 24% increase (P < 0.05)].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Human prostatic cancer cells are sensitive to programmed (apoptotic) death induced by the antiangiogenic agent linomide. 754 15

To investigate the role of mast cells during the process of tumor angiogenesis, we compared the rates of tumor vascularization, growth and metastasis in control WBB6F1(-)+/+ mice and in their mast-cell-deficient WBB6F1-W/Wv littermates injected with MB49 murine bladder carcinoma cells. Our results demonstrate that in mast-cell-deficient mice injected with tumor cells, there is a decreased number of capillaries at the tumor periphery, reduced tumor size relative to control mice, and an absence of metastases. In contrast, when tumor cells were inoculated intravenously, both strains of mice showed high numbers of lung metastases. These results suggested that the reduction of blood vessels at the tumor periphery may lead to a reduction in the number of metastatic cells shed into the circulation in mast-cell-deficient mice.
Invasion Metastasis
PMID:Mast cell accumulation at sites of murine tumor implantation: implications for angiogenesis and tumor metastasis. 754 76

Experimental evidence suggests that tumor growth beyond the earliest stages is dependent on angiogenesis, or neovascularization, and that angiogenesis may also promote metastasis. Recent clinical studies demonstrate that angiogenesis is a prognostic marker in breast, lung, and prostate cancer. To investigate whether tumor angiogenesis also correlates with metastasis and survival in early head and neck carcinoma, we quantified the microvascularity of 106 primary carcinomas prior to treatment and correlated the counts with eventual outcome after 3 to 15 years of follow-up. Microvessels were stained immunocytochemically for von Willebrand factor and then counted by light microscopy. Microvessels were counted per 200x and 400x fields, and their density was graded from 1 to 4, in the area of most intense neovascularization. We found that neither microvessel counts nor density grades correlated with metastatic disease, local recurrence, or survival in early head and neck carcinoma. These results are in contradistinction to those recently reported for other tumor sites.
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PMID:Angiogenesis as a prognostic marker in early head and neck cancer. 754 62

Recent evidence suggests that angiogenesis, as assessed by vascular density, may be an independent prognostic factor in breast carcinoma. The authors chose to examine this hypothesis further using two different methods, both using an immunohistochemical technique to assess vascularity. In the first, tissue sections from 93 patients with human breast carcinoma were immunostained for the endothelial antigen CD 34. Fields were selected at random in sections stained with the monoclonal antibody QBEnd/10, and both the number of blood vessels and percentage of endothelial cells per unit area measured using an interactive image analysis system (SEESCAN). In the second, an additional 72 patients were added and the 165 sections immunostained for CD31 (PECAM 1) using the monoclonal antibody JC 709. The area of highest vascular density was then identified and measured. A statistically significant correlation was found between percentage endothelial area and tumor type (P < .03) using the first method, and, for lymph node-negative patients only, between vascular density and tumor type (P < .02) using the second method. There was no correlation with lymph node status, recurrence, distant metastases, or overall survival using either method (minimum follow-up 12 years). The authors conclude that the evaluation of tumor angiogenesis using these methods does not provide additional prognostic information in this group of patients.
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PMID:Assessment of angiogenesis in breast carcinoma: an important factor in prognosis? 759 Jun 87

To clarify the correlation between tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth in head and neck carcinomas, we investigated the number of microvessels, using immunohistochemical factor VIII. No correlations among this number, differences in the primary lesion, histological differentiation and T classification were detected. The incidence of neck lymph node metastases increased as microvessel numbers increased in tumor sites. The number of microvessels increased as N and Stage classification progressed. The number of microvessels in CR cases after induction chemotherapy were increased. The numbers of microvessels in patients without recurrence were apparently greater than those in patients with recurrence. The results of this study suggest that the number of microvessels in a primary tumor correlates with the metastatic ability of the tumor.
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PMID:[Angiogenesis in head and neck tumor]. 768 79


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