Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The prevalence of neural elements in prostatic carcinoma and their effects on the behavior of the lesion have recently been recognized. Recent reports suggest that chromogranin-A- and neuron-specific enolase-expressing tumors have an earlier progression and a lower response rate to hormonal therapy. The extreme presentation of this tumor is presumed to be small cell carcinoma of the prostate. This bombesin-secreting tumor, which has a characteristic clinical picture of early visceral involvement, wide-ranging
metastases
, and a relatively low rate of expression of PSA and
PAP
, is highly responsive to chemotherapy. The relatively high rate of expression of neural elements in primary prostatic carcinoma is discordant with the low frequency of clinical small cell carcinoma of the prostate. In order to account for these differences, one can assume that neural elements may play a role in the progression of this disease by either developing their own neoplastic process (small cell carcinoma of the prostate) or, in the majority of cases, causing paracrine progression of the tumor. Bombesin is typically secreted by small cell carcinoma of the lung and possibly by the prostate. It has been shown to be a growth factor mediating the progression of this disease in a number of experiments. Preclinical data demonstrate increased invasiveness and increased proliferation associated with bombesin in the treatment of prostatic carcinoma. Based on the hypothesis that neural peptides may be important mediators of androgen-independent growth of prostatic carcinoma as well as predicting poor prognosis, inhibition of these factors may represent a therapeutic strategy of relevance for the treatment of patients with prostatic carcinoma.
...
PMID:The inhibition of the paracrine progression of prostate cancer as an approach to early therapy of prostatic carcinoma. 133 63
We retrospectively evaluated 51 prostate cancer patients found to have pelvic lymph node
metastases
at the time of pelvic lymphadenectomy and 125I implantation. All of them were followed until death or for a minimum of 70 months. Rabbit polyclonal anti-PSA, anti-
PAP
, anti-PSP-94, and mouse TURP-27 monoclonal antibodies were used in immunohistochemical evaluation of the metastatic lesions. In addition, Gleason grade and ploidy were assessed and correlated. No tumor with a Gleason grade of less than 7 could be found in the metastatic lymph nodes. Time to progression (P = .003), disease-specific survival (P = .009), and overall survival (P = .003) were significantly shorter in patients whose tumors had a primary Gleason pattern of 5 (grade 9 or 10). In the PSA study, patients whose tumors were reactive in more than 75% of cancer cells experienced significantly longer survival than those with less than 75% of cancer cells expressing PSA (P = .0006 log rank test). The means of overall survival +/- SEM were 71.5 +/- 5.0 and 34.9 +/- 5.4 months, respectively. Similar correlations were found with disease-specific survival and time to progression. Patterns of
PAP
expression and TURP-27 reactivity were not prognostically useful, whereas PSP-94 expression may add some additional information. These data suggest that evaluation of tissue PSA heterogeneity in lymph node
metastases
may offer additional prognostic information on prostate cancer patients. Better prediction of individual prognosis may be possible with the combined use of Gleason grade, flow cytometry, and PSA expression.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of antigenic heterogeneity, Gleason grade, and ploidy of lymph node metastases in patients with prostate cancer. 137 12
Natural killer (NK) cell activity was studied together with tumor marker serotests (PSA,
PAP
) and blood testosterone, estradiol, cortisol, and prolactin concentrations in treated prostate cancer patients. NK cell activity data were correlated with tumor stage (stage D0 + D1 versus stage D2) and showed statistically insignificant differences. Both tumor progression and stabilization of
metastatic disease
, triggered by the application of more appropriate therapy in progressive subjects, yielded low NK activity data. By contrast, normal NK activity was found during both partial remission of stage D2 tumor and stabilization of the same disease, after an initial period of tumor remission. Differences between NK activity data from the aforementioned two groups are statistically significant (P less than 0.01). In subjects examined, the application of NK activity assay to those with advanced disease reflected changes in the outcome of the treatment more closely than it did routine tumor marker assessment. The activity of NK cells seems unaffected by changes in basal blood estradiol, cortisol, testosterone, and prolactin concentrations that occur during therapy with pharmacological agents (estradiol, cyproterone acetate, diethylstilbestrol, and flutamide) and during surgical castration. The reported NK activity recordings in treated prostate cancer patients might be indicative of the presence of tumor cells in the circulation. If this holds true, the measurement of NK activity would appear to furnish urological oncology with a new tool for early, rapid recognition of progressive metastatic tumors.
...
PMID:NK cell activity in treated prostate cancer patients as a probe for circulating tumor cells: hormone regulatory effects in vivo. 138 13
Bone scintigraphy of metastatic lesion on 128 patients with prostatic cancer were classified according to the proposal by Soloway et al (Cancer, 61; 195-202, 1988). Since all patients received endocrine therapy, the response to therapy and survival were examined in relation to bone lesion. In extent of disease (EOD) 1, main metastatic lesions were located in the pelvis, lumbar spine, and with increasing number of EOD,
metastases
in the upper spine, rib, and skull appeared. Longer survival were noticed in EOD 1, followed by EOD 2 and EOD 3, and EOD 4 revealed the shortest survival. The survival of EOD 2 was similar to thus of EOD 3. However, when grades of tumor were considered, moderately differentiated cancer showed longer survival than poorly differentiated cancer in EOD 2 and EOD 3. The response as assessed by bone scintigraphy following 6-month therapy was well correlated with the number of EOD. When individual items for evaluation of response were examined, the results of local response of the prostate and values of
PAP
showed good correlation with survivals, however, that of bone lesions with bone scintigraphy failed to show such a correlation with prognosis. Therefore, it is concluded that the therapeutic evaluation of bone lesions with bone scintigraphy is difficult to interpret 6 months after initiation of treatment.
...
PMID:[Relationship between extent of bone metastases and effect of endocrine therapy evaluated with bone scintigraphy in stage D2 prostatic cancer]. 150 21
Six patients with localized prostatic carcinoma undergoing radical prostatectomy were studied by serial sample collection from the time of surgical removal of the prostate up to one week in the postoperative period. Of the three markers studied (
PAP
, PSA, LASA), half-life of specific prostatic markers were calculated. Half-life of
PAP
was found to be 7.25 hours +/- SE of 0.7 hours. For PSA the half-life could be obtained in 4 of 6 patients and was found to be 45.5 hours +/- SE 4.9 hours. In 2 patients PSA did not fall in a regular fashion and half-life could not be obtained. In both patients
metastatic disease
has developed within six months of surgery. LASA demonstrated progressive increase following surgery, most likely due to associated inflammatory reaction. These studies confirm previous observations that PSA is a more sensitive marker than
PAP
, and that the presence of an elevated PSA after radical prostatectomy denotes the presence of residual disease.
...
PMID:Prognostic implications of disappearance rate of biologic markers following radical prostatectomy. 170 May 27
Levels of serum tumor markers including tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA), CA 15-3, CA 19-9, squamous cell carcinoma antigen, carcinoembryonic antigen, alpha-fetoprotein, and
PAP
were measured in 26 patients with bone metastasis and in 9 patients with primary bone tumors. More than one markers was elevated in 19 of the 26 patients with bone metastasis, although there was no elevation of the markers in 3 patients with renal cell carcinoma. TPA was the most sensitive marker in the diagnosis of metastasis. CA 15-3 was also a sensitive marker in this study, since metastasis from breast carcinoma may be the most common of all
metastases
in the skeleton. On the other hand, alpha-fetoprotein was uniformly unresponsive except in one case of gastric cancer. Combinations of markers are valuable for metastasis screening tests. No definite correlations were found between the markers in this study. On the other hand, there was a slight elevation of the markers observed in two of the nine patients with primary bone lesions. Serum tumor markers are useful in the diagnosis of bone metastasis to differentiate it from primary bone lesions. Especially in solitary bone lesions, serum markers may be the only way to make a differential diagnosis between the two.
...
PMID:Diagnostic value of serum tumor markers in skeletal metastasis of carcinomas. 170 81
Serum activities of bone alkaline phosphatase (b-ALP) and of tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (tr-ACP) were evaluated in 271 cancer patients; 120 of them had bone metastases (BM) and 151 had none. Correlation coefficients, specificities, sensitivities, negative and positive predicting values were computed. They showed the important contribution that these isoenzymes can bring to the diagnosis of BM in 80 patients with prostate cancer, and to the followup of 191 patients with breast cancer. The assay results were analysed in parallel with bone scan and radiography. They were also compared to those of serum antigens: PSA and
PAP
for prostate cancer, and CEA and CA15.3 for breast cancer. These results clearly indicate that both isoenzymes are better correlated with BM than antigens, these antigens being markers of the whole tumor burden--primary tumor,
metastases
, recurrence--whereas b-ALP and tr-ACP are specific markers of bone metabolism.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of two serum isoenzyme phosphatases as bone metastasis markers]. 208 Dec 81
Patients with newly diagnosed prostatic cancer should be investigated with regard to the presence or absence of distant
metastases
by: (1) Clinical history especially of weight loss, recent pain, or analgesics intake. (2) Physical examination, looking especially for hepatic enlargement, peripheral lymph nodes, local bone tenderness. (3) Performance status. (4) Hemoglobin, creatinine, PSA and/or
PAP
, alkaline phosphatases, liver tests, testosterone. (5) Bone scan with X-ray of doubtful hot spots. (6) Chest X-ray. (7) Ultrasound scans (liver, kidney, lymph nodes) or CT scan may be indicated if abnormal blood parameters or in specific situations. (8) Other investigations are only indicated in special circumstances. Follow-up should include: (1), (2), (3), (4) every 3 months. For patients in clinical trials, depending on the end point, bone scan should be repeated every 6 months or possibly depending on the prognostic group (good: every 12 months; bad: 3 to 6 months). For routine clinical management, it could be repeated only when markers (
PAP
, PSA, alkaline phosphatase) show significant (25-50%) increase and provided the result will influence treatment. Other investigations should only be repeated or performed if abnormal at the start of if clinical data require them.
...
PMID:The staging of M+ disease. 221 62
A malignant nonfunctioning paraganglioma of the pelvic retroperitoneum (left external iliac artery) with
metastases
to the femoral lymph nodes was found in a 68-year-old woman at exploratory laparotomy. Light microscopy showed a typical alveolar pattern with fine vascular stroma. The tumor cells had finely granular eosinophilic cytoplasm and oval to round nuclei with pleomorphism and mitotic figures, Grimelius stain showed no argyrophilic granules, but S 100 protein was demonstrated in the cytoplasm by the
PAP
method of Sternberger. Formaling fixed tissues were examination by electron microscopy, and dense core granules consistent with neurosecretory granules were found in the cytoplasm of some tumor cells.
...
PMID:[Malignant paraganglioma of the peri-iliac artery]. 242 Oct 24
The clinical features of a new prostate tumor marker, prostate-specific antigen (prostate antigen, PA), has been reviewed. Although PA cannot be used in early detection of prostate cancer, simultaneous determination of PA and
PAP
yields an additive clinical value in immuno-diagnosis of prostate cancer. At the present stage of development, PA is most useful as a prognostic marker for monitoring disease recurrence and treatment response. Also, PA is an effective immunohistologic marker for differential diagnosis of metastatic carcinomas with unknown primary, especially in the identification of metastatic prostate tumor in distant
metastases
and in the differentiation of primary prostate carcinoma from poorly differentiated transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. Unequivocal evidence is not yet available on the role of circulating PA-binding globulin as an auto-antibody or an anti-tumor antibody as a result of patient's immune response. This observation is of clinical value for investigation of prostate cancer biology. The intriguing protease activity as detected in PA may provide new avenues for prostate cancer research.
...
PMID:What's new in tumor markers for prostate cancer? 242 64
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>