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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the antitumor efficacy against metastatic breast cancer of fluoropyrimidines alone and combined with other chemotherapeutic agents, we developed a murine model of breast cancer metastatic to the lung by orthotopically implanting MDA-MB-435S breast tumors into mice. MDA tumor cells greatly metastasized to lung tissue only after the orthotopically implanted tumors were surgically removed. Measurement of the expression of enzymes involved in 5-FU metabolism showed significantly higher activity of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) and lower activity of
thymidylate synthase
(TS) in the MDA
metastases
than in the orthotopically implanted tumors. Based on the enzymatic properties of metastatic tumors, the minimum toxic doses of UFT (17.5 mg/kg/day) as a DPD-inhibitory fluoropyrimidine (DIF), and of 5'-DFUR (120 mg/kg/day) as a non-DIF, were orally administered to mice with pulmonary metastasis of the breast tumor. The results showed that UFT significantly inhibited the growth of pulmonary
metastases
of the breast tumors, but 5'-DFUR did not. UFT seemed to inhibit the growth of the pulmonary
metastases
of the breast tumors in combination with paclitaxel (50 mg/kg) more than in combination with 5'-DFUR, although the antitumor efficacy of neither combination was significantly different from that of paclitaxel alone. These results suggest that combination of DIF with other chemotherapeutic drugs, such as taxanes, is required to attain high antimetastatic and antitumor efficacy against breast tumor
metastases
, based on the molecular characteristics of the metastatic tumors.
...
PMID:[Antimetastatic and antitumor effects of fluoropyrimidines alone and combined with taxanes in a murine model of breast cancer metastatic to the lung]. 1181 85
Cellular drug resistance is one of the principal obstacles to the clinical efficacy of cancer chemotherapy. In this review, we describe the potential role for translational regulation as a novel mechanism for modulating chemosensitivity. The evidence for the translational control of
thymidylate synthase
, dihydrofolate reductase, and p53 will be presented, as will experimental data showing how disruptions in this important regulatory process can lead to the rapid emergence of cellular drug resistance.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 2001
PMID:Translational regulation as a novel mechanism for the development of cellular drug resistance. 1183 45
Analysis of tumour markers is helping to predict individual patient response to chemotherapy. However, the difficulties in obtaining
metastatic disease
samples has led to a reliance on assessment of primary tumour, with little data on its predictive ability. This study assessed
thymidylate synthase
(TS), a target for the commonly used drug 5FU, in 42 paired primary colorectal tumour and lymph node metastasis. High TS staining was seen in 63% of primary colon tumour cells and 81% of the secondary lymph node. Primary tumour did not have significant predictive power for secondary tumour samples (kappa=0.125; p=0.38). There was no significant relationship between TS staining and expression of G1/S cell cycle proteins p21, p27, p53, cyclin D1, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and retinoblastoma protein (Rb) (p>0.05 in all cases). Discordance in TS protein levels between primary and secondary tumours demonstrates the danger of predicting outcome after chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer from the primary tumour.
...
PMID:Primary colorectal tumour is not an accurate predictor of thymidylate synthase in lymph node metastasis. 1183 85
Recent investigations have focused on the prognostic value of
thymidylate synthase
(TS) assessment in
metastases
of colorectal carcinoma (CRC). In order to evaluate the prognostic impact of TS expression after resection of
metastases
of colorectal cancer followed by systemic adjuvant chemotherapy, we performed an immunohistochemical characterisation of TS in the primary tumours and in the corresponding radically resected hepatic and pulmonary
metastases
. An additional objective was to compare the levels of TS in primary and
metastatic disease
. TS expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry using the monoclonal antibody TS 106. The study population consisted of 60 patients: 48 underwent liver and 12 lung resection. All of them received adjuvant chemotherapy after metastasectomy according to the Mayo Clinic schedule. In the 49 evaluable primary tumours, TS score was high in 53% and low in 47% of patients, while in the 60 metastatic samples TS immunostaining was high in 33% and low in 67%. There was a significantly smaller number of high TS expressors in metastatic than in primary tumours (P<0.04). No correlation was observed between TS expression and the site of the metastasis. TS status did not significantly correlate with the median disease-free interval (DFI) after metastasectomy, although this parameter was longer for patients with low TS immunoreactivity in the resected
metastases
than for those with high TS lesions (19.6 versus 13.8 months). Patients with high TS levels, however, had a significantly shorter median overall survival (OS) (27.6 months) than those with low TS expression (36.3 months) (P<0.008). TS status in the resected
metastases
confirmed its independent prognostic value in the multivariate analysis and was the only prognostic marker of OS in the subgroup of patients with resected liver metastases. These results suggest that high TS levels in resected
metastases
of colorectal cancer are associated with a poor outcome after surgery and 5-FU adjuvant therapy; therefore, a prospective assessment of TS levels in resected colorectal
metastases
could be useful to define which patients will most likely benefit from 5-FU adjuvant therapy after metastasectomy. Chemotherapeutic agents that target TS may not be the appropriate adjuvant treatment after metastasectomy for patients with a high TS expression in the resected
metastases
of colorectal cancer.
...
PMID:Predictive value of thymidylate synthase expression in resected metastases of colorectal cancer. 1187 45
Metastatic breast cancer is a chemotherapy-responsive disease, and significant palliation of cancer-related symptoms can be achieved with effective treatment. New treatments are needed because patients with metastatic breast cancer commonly out-live the effectiveness of currently available cytotoxic and hormonal treatments. Pemetrexed is a novel antimetabolite that inhibits three enzymes critical in purine and pyrimidine biosynthetic pathways:
thymidylate synthase
, dihydrofolate reductase, and glycinamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase. Several phase II studies of pemetrexed have showed objective response rates of more than 30% in minimally pretreated metastatic breast cancer patients and approximately 20% in more heavily pretreated patients. Pemetrexed is associated with limited toxicity when administered with folic acid and vitamin B(12) supplementation and is therefore a promising agent both for palliative treatment of
metastatic disease
and for incorporation into combination regimens for treating newly diagnosed metastatic and early-stage breast cancer.
...
PMID:Pemetrexed: a promising new treatment for breast cancer. 1202 91
Drug resistance is often a limiting factor in successful chemotherapy. Our laboratory has been interested in studying mechanisms of resistance to drugs that are targeted to the thymidylate biosynthesis pathway especially those that target
thymidylate synthase
(TS) and dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). We have used leukemia as a model system to study resistance to methotrexate (MTX) and colorectal cancer as the model system to study 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) resistance. In leukemias, we and others have shown that transport, efflux, polyglutamylation and hydrolase activities are major determinants of MTX resistance. We have further reported that some leukemic cells have an increase in DHFR gene copy number possibly contributing to the resistant phenotype. Recently, we have begun to study in detail the molecular mechanisms that govern translational regulation of DHFR in response to MTX as an additional resistance mechanism. Studies thus far involving colorectal tumors obtained from patients have focused predominantly on the predictive value of levels of TS expression and p53 mutations in determining response to 5-FU. Although the predictive value of these two measures appears to be significant, given the variety of resistance to 5-FU observed in cell lines, it is not likely that these are the only measures predictive of response or responsible for acquired resistance to this drug. The enzyme uridine-cytidine monophosphate kinase (UMPK) is an essential and rate-limiting enzyme in 5-FU activation while dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD) is a catabolic enzyme that inactivates 5-FU. Alterations in UMPK and DPD may therefore explain failure of 5-FU response in the absence of alterations in TS or p53. Transcription factors that regulate TS may also influence drug sensitivity. We have found that mRNA levels of the E2F family of transcription factors correlates with TS message levels and are higher in lung metastases than in liver metastases of colorectal cancers. Moreover, gene copy number of the E2F-1 gene appears to be increased in a significant number of samples obtained from
metastases
of colorectal cancer. We have also generated mutants of both DHFR and TS that confer resistance to MTX as well as 5-FU by random as well as site-directed mutagenesis. These mutants used alone or as fusion cDNAs of the mutants have proven to be useful in transplant studies where transfer of these mutant cDNAs to bone marrow cells have been shown to confer drug resistance to recipients. The fusion cDNAs of DHFR such as the DHFR-herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSVTK) are also useful for regulation of gene expression in vivo using MTX as the small molecule regulator that can be monitored by positron emission tomography (PET) scanning or by optical imaging using a fusion construct such as DHFR-EGFP.
...
PMID:Novel aspects of resistance to drugs targeted to dihydrofolate reductase and thymidylate synthase. 1208 58
Both 5-fluorouracil and doxorubicin are commonly used agents in chemotherapy of gastric cancer in adjuvant setting as well as
metastatic disease
. In a variety of malignancies, high expression of multidrug resistance-associated protein1 and P-glycoprotein has been associated with resistance to doxorubicin, whereas 5-fluorouracil resistance has correlated with the level of
thymidylate synthase
expression. We evaluated the expression of multidrug resistance-associated protein1, P-glycoprotein, and
thymidylate synthase
using immunohistochemistry in 103 locally advanced gastric cancer patients (stage IB-IV) who underwent 5-fluorouracil and doxorubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy after curative resection and investigated the association between their expression and clinicopathologic characteristics including prognosis of the patients. While high expression (> or =5% of tumour cells positive) of multidrug resistance-associated protein1 and P-glycoprotein was observed in 70 patients (68%) and 42 patients (41%), respectively, 65 patients (63%) had primary tumours with high expression (> or =25% of tumour cells positive) of
thymidylate synthase
. There was a significant association between multidrug resistance-associated protein1 and P-glycoprotein expression (P<0.0001) as well as P-glycoprotein and
thymidylate synthase
expression (P<0.0001). High multidrug resistance-associated protein1 and P-glycoprotein expressions were associated with well and moderately differentiated histology (P<0.0001 and P=0.03, respectively) and intestinal type (P<0.0001 and P=0.009, respectively). High multidrug resistance-associated protein1 expression correlated with lymph node metastasis (P=0.037), advanced stage (P=0.015), and older age (P=0.021). Five-year disease-free survival and overall survival of total patients were 55.2% and 56.2%, respectively, with a median follow-up of 68 months. There were no significant differences in disease-free survival and overall survival according to the expression of multidrug resistance-associated protein1 (P=0.902 and P=0.975, respectively), P-glycoprotein (P=0.987 and P=0.955, respectively), and
thymidylate synthase
(P=0.604 and P=0.802, respectively). Concurrent high expression of these proteins (high multidrug resistance-associated protein1/P-glycoprotein, high multidrug resistance-associated protein1/
thymidylate synthase
, high P-glycoprotein/
thymidylate synthase
) did not correlate with disease-free survival or overall survival. Even high expression of all three proteins was not associated with poor disease-free survival (P=0.919) and overall survival (P=0.852). In conclusion, high expression of multidrug resistance-associated protein1, P-glycoprotein, and
thymidylate synthase
did not predict poor prognosis of gastric cancer patients treated with 5-fluorouracil and doxorubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy. A larger study including patients treated with surgical resection alone would be necessary.
...
PMID:Expression of multidrug resistance-associated protein1,P-glycoprotein, and thymidylate synthase in gastric cancer patients treated with 5-fluorouracil and doxorubicin-based adjuvant chemotherapy after curative resection. 1208 7
Esophageal cancer is uncommon, but its incidence is rapidly increasing in the Western countries because of the high incidence of the cardia esophageal adenocarcinoma. Notwithstanding the encouraging results achieved with surgical procedures, esophageal carcinoma has a poor prognosis with 5-year survival in 10% of cases without differences between both squamous and adenocarcinoma histologies. Almost 50% of esophageal cancer patients have unresectable disease at presentation; in the past years combined modality treatments, using chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy with or without surgery, have been evaluated to reduce the risk of local and/or distant recurrences. Ongoing regimens with new agents (Taxanes, Vinorelbine, Irinotecan), in association or not with platinum compounds, show good antitumor efficacy and tolerability, even in the
metastatic disease
. Preoperative strategies with radiation only did not give any advantage compared to surgery alone, instead, controversial results were obtained, with a minimal advantage, using chemotherapy. Combined chemotherapy and radiation, in suitable candidates for resection has shown an improvement of complete pathological responses, in both the histologies, but with superior toxicities when compared to chemotherapy or radiation therapy alone. Postoperative adjuvant therapies as radiation, chemotherapy or both, have not led to a marked improvement in overall survival and should be performed only in clinical trials. The use of chemoradiotherapy showed a clear advantage versus radiotherapy alone and in many cases equivalent to regimens plus surgery even if control studies haven't been performed. Clinical trials with novel biologic agents, in combination to chemotherapy or alone, against cell growth arrest, neoagiongenesis and tumor metastasis invasion process are currently under evaluation. In the coming years new markers as antigen Ki-67 determination, p53 mutation or high levels activity of
thymidylate synthase
and novel staging techniques as PET could be precious to identify the better treatment for each patient.
...
PMID:[New strategies in the treatment of esophageal cancer]. 1259 16
In order to develop new therapeutic regimens for biliary tract cancers, which carry dismal prognoses, the establishment of a human biliary tract cancer xenograft model is essential. Herein, we report the successful establishment and characterization of two xenograft models of human biliary tract cancers. An adenosquamous gallbladder cancer cell line (TGBC-44) and a bile duct adenocarcinoma cell line (TGBC-47) were obtained from fresh surgical specimens in our department and subcutaneously inoculated into nude mice. The overall tumor take rate was 100% and solid tumors grew measurable after 5 and 7 days for TGBC-44 and TGBC-47, respectively. Tumor doubling time was 3.9+/-1.1 and 4.1+/-0.5 days in the exponential growth phase in TGBC-44 and TGBC-47 xenografts, respectively. Isozyme test and karyotype analysis confirmed the human origin. Histopathology analysis revealed that the TGBC-44 xenograft retained both the squamous and the adenocarcinoma components, and the TGBC-47 xenograft exhibited poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma as in the corresponding original tumors. Immunohistochemistry and Western blotting studies revealed positive and similar expression of platelet derived endothelial growth factor/thymidine phosphorylase (PDGF/TP),
thymidylate synthase
(TS), and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) in both original tumors and xenograft models. No macroscopic
metastases
were found at the time of sacrifice. We have successfully established two models of human biliary tract cancer, gallbladder and bile duct cancer. Models retained the morphological and biochemical characteristics of the original tumor and demonstrated constant biological behavior in all transplanted mice. These models could be useful tools for developing new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies against biliary tract cancers.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of novel xenograft models of human biliary tract carcinomas. 1453 68
Although the expression of
thymidylate synthase
(TS) in metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) may be a better predictor of response to 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy than TS expression in primary CRC, this enzyme has not been well studied in tumor-draining regional lymph nodes. We retrospectively examined TS expression in 12 primary CRC lesions (pT3) and matched sentinel lymph nodes. Of the 8 primary tumors that were TS-positive, 50 per cent (4/8) had tumor-positive lymph nodes and 50 per cent (4/8) had tumor-negative nodes. Of the 4 primary tumors that were TS-negative, 75 per cent (3/4) had tumor-positive nodes and 25 per cent (1/4) had tumor-negative nodes [kappa = -0.1386, 95 per cent confidence interval: (-0.4820, 0.2048), P = 0.4284]. Of the 8 TS-positive primaries, 25 per cent (2/8) had TS-positive nodes and 75 per cent (6/8) had TS-negative nodes. Of the 4 TS-negative primaries, 50 per cent (2/4) had TS-positive nodes and 50 per cent (2/4) had TS-negative nodes [kappa = -0.0131, 95 per cent confidence interval: (-0.2958, 0.2696), P = 0.9274]. Two of the three TS-negative primaries that had metastasized to regional lymph nodes were associated with TS-positive lymph nodes. Our findings indicate that expression of TS by a primary CRC does not correlate with nodal
metastases
or nodal TS expression. Nodal expression of TS may be important in predicting response to 5-fluorouracil when a primary CRC is TS-negative.
...
PMID:Differential expression of thymidylate synthase in colorectal tumors and matched lymph nodes: impact on adjuvant treatment. 1457 Mar 75
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