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)

Hypercalcemia is associated with a few primary malignant neoplasms and with a variety of tumors that have spread by metastases. Hyperparathyroidism is a diagnosis that is usually not considered in these patients. At our institution, 18 patients with malignant tumors presented over a 6-year period with hypercalcemia caused by hyperparathyroidism. There were five men and 13 women with a mean age of 48 years (range 24-87 years). Primary tumors in these patients included colon carcinoma (four cases), breast carcinoma (four cases), lymphoma (four cases), thyroid carcinoma (four cases), Paget's disease (one case), and lung carcinoma (one case). Metastases of the primary tumor occurred in seven patients, and in 11 patients the tumor was not metastatic or recurrent. Serum levels of calcium, phosphate, and chloride averaged 11.8 mg/dl, and 100 mEq/liter, respectively. C-terminal parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels ranged from 300 to 1,900 pg/ml with an average of 1,150 pg/ml (normal 50-340 pg/ml). At operation, a single parathyroid adenoma was discovered in 15 patients, and four-gland hyperplasia was noted in three patients. In all cases, serum levels of calcium returned to normal after operation. We conclude that patients with malignant tumors and concomitant hypercalcemia should be evaluated for the possibility of hyperparathyroidism. In cases of primary hyperparathyroidism, elevated C-terminal PTH level should be diagnostic. If hyperparathyroidism is determined to be the cause of hypercalcemia, neck exploration and parathyroidectomy are indicated.
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PMID:Malignancy and concomitant primary hyperparathyroidism. 333 14

DNAs of cell lines derived from human metastatic tumors were transfected into tumorigenic, nonmetastasizing murine cells (BALB 3T12-3) to determine if the capacity to metastasize could be conferred by this transfer of portions of the human genome. Using the calcium phosphate method, whole cell DNA was cotransfected into the murine cells along with a neomycin-resistance gene. Recipient murine cells (10(6] which grew in neomycin, indicating successful transfection, were injected via tail vein into 4- to 6-week-old male athymic nude mice. Animals were sacrificed if they appeared ill or at times up to 24 weeks after injection if they remained healthy. Murine cells transfected with DNA from one cell line derived from a hepatic metastasis of a human pancreatic adenocarcinoma (NCI-ZRY) formed experimental pulmonary metastases in 11 of 13 animals injected. Neither murine cells (unmanipulated BALB 3T12-3 cells) nor murine cells transfected with DNA from the same cell type (BALB 3T12-3 cells transfected with BALB 3T12-3 DNA) produced experimental metastases when each cell type was injected into 20 and 10 animals, respectively (P2 less than 0.0001). The results are consistent with the hypothesis that expression of a structural or regulatory protein encoded on human DNA conferred the metastatic phenotype to the recipient murine cells.
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PMID:Metastatic phenotype in murine cells transfected with human DNA. 336 84

This study was carried out to evaluate the metabolic consequences of osteosclerotic skeletal metastases of prostatic origin in a homogeneous group of patients. We found significantly increased mean values of serum alkaline phosphatase activity and significantly reduced mean values of serum phosphate, 24-h urinary calcium, fasting calcium excretion and TmP/GFR in cancer patients with respect to age-matched controls. Mean serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) levels were raised, with two patients showing increased values of the hormone above our normal limits. Our findings indicate that mild secondary hyperparathyroidism is a feature of these patients. However, it cannot be excluded that both the reduced serum phosphate and TmP/GFR values may be related, at least in some cases, to the effects of the tumour itself on tubular reabsorption of phosphate.
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PMID:Biochemical picture accompanying sclerotic bone metastases of prostatic origin. 342 18

In a randomized phase III trial performed by the Urological Group of the European Organization for Research on Treatment of Cancer low dose estramustine phosphate (280 mg. twice daily for 8 weeks and 140 mg. twice daily thereafter) was compared to diethylstilbestrol (1 mg. 3 times daily) in patients with stages T3 to T4, M0 or M1 prostatic cancer. Of 248 patients entered 227 were evaluable for analysis: 115 received estramustine phosphate and 112 received diethylstilbestrol. The best response of the local tumor as assessed by palpation was seen in patients receiving diethylstilbestrol. There was no significant difference between treatments for response rate of metastases, interval to local progression, distant progression, over-all survival and death of carcinoma of the prostate. Duration of survival was correlated with the assessment of local response as determined by palpation. The response of distant lesions also was correlated closely with survival. Diethylstilbestrol (1 mg. 3 times daily) was associated with a significantly worse degree of cardiovascular toxicity than estramustine phosphate. This finding was especially obvious in patients who had no history of cardiovascular disease. Gastrointestinal toxicity occurred in 25 patients treated with estramustine phosphate, including 6 in whom cessation of treatment was necessary. Further studies are required to determine the optimum dose of diethylstilbestrol and estramustine phosphate, and to establish the best form of hormonal treatment for prostatic carcinoma.
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PMID:A comparison of the effect of diethylstilbestrol with low dose estramustine phosphate in the treatment of advanced prostatic cancer: final analysis of a phase III trial of the European Organization for Research on Treatment of Cancer. 352 66

We have studied the posttranslational modifications of the 52-kD protein, an estrogen-regulated autocrine mitogen secreted by several human breast cancer cells in culture (Westley, B., and H. Rochefort, 1980, Cell, 20:353-362). The secreted 52-kD protein was found to be phosphorylated mostly (94%) on high-mannose N-linked oligosaccharide chains, and mannose-6-phosphate signals were identified. The phosphate signal was totally removed by alkaline phosphatase hydrolysis. The secreted 52-kD protein was partly taken up by MCF7 cells via mannose-6-phosphate receptors and processed into 48- and 34-kD protein moieties as with lysosomal hydrolases. By electron microscopy, immunoperoxidase staining revealed most of the reactive proteins in lysosomes. After complete purification by immunoaffinity chromatography, we identified both the secreted 52-kD protein and its processed cellular forms as aspartic and acidic proteinases specifically inhibited by pepstatin. The 52-kD protease is secreted in breast cancer cells under its inactive proenzyme form, which can be autoactivated at acidic pH with a slight decrease of molecular mass. The enzyme of breast cancer cells, when compared with cathepsin D(s) of normal tissue, was found to be similar in molecular weight, enzymatic activities (inhibitors, substrates, specific activities), and immunoreactivity. However, the 52-kD protein and its cellular processed forms of breast cancer cells were totally sensitive to endo-beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase H (Endo H), whereas several cellular cathepsin D(s) of normal tissue were partially Endo H-resistant. This difference, in addition to others concerning tissue distribution, mitogenic activity and hormonal regulation, strongly suggests that the 52-kD cathepsin D-like enzyme of breast cancer cells is different from previously described cathepsin D(s). The 52-kD estrogen-induced lysosomal proteinase may have important functions in facilitating the mammary cancer cells to proliferate, migrate, and metastasize.
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PMID:Phosphorylation, glycosylation, and proteolytic activity of the 52-kD estrogen-induced protein secreted by MCF7 cells. 354 22

To determine the frequency with which liver metastases are visualized on bone scintigraphy, 425 pairs of liver and bone scans, performed within one month of each other, were reviewed. Sixty-three of the 425 liver scans showed metastases. Of these 63, five cases of carcinoma of the colon and six cases of carcinoma of the lung also visualized by Tc-99m MDP scintigraphy. This represented 46% of colon metastases and 15% of lung metastases detected on liver scan. Liver metastases from other primary tumors were not detected on bone scan, but the numbers for these tumors were small. The liver metastases which were detected on bone scan were significantly larger than those which were not. The literature was reviewed and the primary and secondary tumors of liver with uptake of Tc-99m phosphate compounds listed.
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PMID:Visualization of metastatic liver disease on technetium-99m bone scintigraphy. 358 4

The purpose of these studies was to determine whether the oral administration of a lipophilic analog of muramyl dipeptide, MTP-PE, can produce in situ activation of tumoricidal properties in mouse macrophages. MTP-PE was dissolved in a phosphate-buffered saline to produce micelles. Single or multiple oral administrations of MTP-PE produced tumoricidal activation in both lung and peritoneal macrophages. This was in direct contrast to the i.v. or i.p. administrations of MTP-PE incorporated in liposomes, which produced activation in only lung or only peritoneal macrophages, respectively. The distribution and fate of [3H]-labeled MTP-PE subsequent to oral administration revealed that MTP-PE was found in various organs independent of reticuloendothelial activity. Finally, the repeated twice-weekly oral administrations of MTP-PE inhibited lung and lymph node metastasis in C57BL/6 mice by syngeneic B16 melanoma cells. The oral administration of MTP-PE, however, was not effective in eradicating well-established melanoma metastases. We conclude that the oral administration of a lipophilic muramyl dipeptide produces systemic activation of macrophages. The feasibility of enhancing host defense against infections and cancer by the oral administration of an immunomodulator has obvious clinical advantages.
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PMID:Systemic activation of tumoricidal properties in mouse macrophages and inhibition of melanoma metastases by the oral administration of MTP-PE, a lipophilic muramyl dipeptide. 358 79

The concentration in serum of testosterone, sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), and albumin has been measured, and from these measurements free testosterone has been calculated in 75 patients with carcinoma of the prostate treated with either bilateral orchidectomy, stilbestrol, or estramustine phosphate (Estracyt). After exclusion of 3 noncompliant patients, total testosterone did not differ significantly between treatments, but free testosterone was lower in estrogen-treated patients (5.9 +/- 0.9 (SEM) pmol/l, n = 28) compared with the orchidectomized patients (23 +/- 1.4 pmol/l, n = 44) (P less than 0.001); all of the estrogen-treated patients falling in the lower third of the range of the orchidectomized patients. Free testosterone did not change systematically during several years of treatment and there was no evidence of a rise with clinical deterioration. In the 33 patients with metastatic cancer treated with orchidectomy, the third with the lowest free testosterone or total testosterone showed a better survival over 2 years than the two-thirds with higher free or total testosterone; thereafter, the advantage was lost.
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PMID:Relationship of testosterone, sex hormone binding globulin, and calculated free testosterone to subsequent clinical progress in patients with carcinoma of the prostate treated with bilateral orchidectomy or estrogens. 365 25

Blood platelets have been suggested to play an important role in modulating the development of experimental metastases. Tumour cells can induce platelet aggregation in vitro and a number of mechanisms have been proposed to explain the in vivo and in vitro observations. In the present study, we used tumour cells cloned from B16 melanoma and mouse mammary tumour virus (MMTV) carcinoma polyclonal populations to check whether tumour cells with low- and high-metastatic behaviour in vivo had different quantitative and qualitative platelet-aggregating activity in vitro. We found no significant quantitative difference between platelet aggregation induced by the low- and the high-metastatic clones. Indeed both the high and the low metastatic B16 melanoma clones poorly aggregated platelets, while both the high and low metastatic MMTV carcinoma clones efficiently aggregated platelets. Both the B16 melanoma and the MMTV carcinoma parental cell lines, which can be classed as intermediate metastatic, aggregated platelets well. However, based on the results with heparin and creatine phosphate/creatine phosphokinase, it appeared that qualitative differences might exist in the mechanism of platelet aggregation by tumour cells. For the parental lines and highly metastatic clone C1 a thrombin-linked component was more important than an ADP-like component, which was nevertheless present, to promote platelet aggregation. For the low-metastatic clone C2, the ADP-like component appeared to be the most important.
Invasion Metastasis 1987
PMID:Tumour-cell-induced platelet aggregation: studies with cloned metastatic and non-metastatic variants. 367 44

The major purpose of these studies was to determine whether the expression of isozymes by tumor cells was heterogeneous among tumor cell subpopulations within a neoplasm and whether expression of one or another isozyme correlated with metastatic potential of tumor cells. The expression levels of 40 isozymes were determined in 56 cell lines, many of them clonal, from nine different murine and human tumors. The enzymes chosen for study are involved in nucleotide, carbohydrate and pentose phosphate metabolism, and as such are indicators of the general metabolic and differentiational status of the cell. The tumors studied included two murine and two human malignant melanomas, four murine fibrosarcomas, and one human prostatic adenocarcinoma. The lines isolated from these tumors consisted of cells that are tumorigenic non-metastatic, tumorigenic low metastatic and tumorigenic highly metastatic. Clonally derived cell lines from a given tumor differed in their expression of a number of different isozymes, including adenosine deaminase, creatine phosphokinase-B and lactate dehydrogenase. Different patterns of isozyme expression were observed among different tumor types as well as between tumors of the same type; however, there were no differences in isozyme expression for any enzyme tested that correlated with metastatic ability of tumor cells.
Clin Exp Metastasis
PMID:Heterogeneity of isozyme expression in tumor cells does not correlate with metastatic potential. 374 91


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