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)
Tissue factor is a cell surface glycoprotein responsible for initiating the extrinsic pathway of coagulation. Many tumor cell homogenates and intact tumor cells have been shown to contain tissue factor activity. Immunohistochemical studies show that many tumors associated with Trousseau's syndrome express tissue factor on their cell surfaces. Tumor cells shed membrane fragments which carry tissue factor that can account for the activation of the clotting system. Tumor cells also produce soluble substances that can induce tissue factor expression on host cells, such as endothelium and monocytes, at sites distant from the tumor. Although, all the functional TF molecules are localized on the outer cell membrane in many tumor cells, the procoagulant activity on the intact cell surface is largely dormant and can be greatly enhanced upon cell injury or damage. Tissue factor procoagulant activity on the cell surface can be modulated by alterations in the plasma membrane without loss of cell viability. Tissue factor activity on cell surfaces is largely regulated by a plasma inhibitor, tissue factor pathway inhibitor. This inhibitor binds to both functional and
non-functional
tissue factor/VIIa complexes on the cell surface and prevents
non-functional
tissue factor/VIIa complexes from becoming functional after cell injury or lysis. Heparin, but not warfarin, therapy is effective in preventing the occurrence of devastating thrombotic events in patients with Trousseau's syndrome and the reason(s) for this are still unknown.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 1992 Nov
PMID:Tissue factor as a tumor procoagulant. 142 17
Among non-chromaffin paragangliomas, the so-called aorticopulmonary or branchiomeric mediastinal chemodectomas are very rare tumors. A case is reported, and 57 similar cases described in the literature are reviewed. As recommended by Olson, a separate group was instituted of 21 cases of the so-called posterior mediastinal or aorticosympathetic group of the costovertebral groove. In principle, aorticopulmonary chemodectomas are
non-functional
, and in 9 out of 10 cases follow a slow and benign course extending over many, or even tens of years. In contrast to carotid and jugular paragangliomas they are rarely multifocal: when this is the case it is difficult to confirm the presence of
metastases
, this being however the most reliable criterion of their malignancy. The fortuitous discovery on a radiography of a tumor of the anterior and middle compartments of the upper mediastinum should invoke the presence of an aorticopulmonary chemodectoma, and lead to arteriography of the aortic arch region. Diagnosis is made essentially by pathological examination. Treatment is exclusively by surgical excision, and this was complete in nearly half of the cases treated. Prognosis is not hopeless after partial removal, however, and a relatively comfortable survival can be obtained extending over many years.
...
PMID:[Branchiomeric mediastinal chemodectoma: a case report and literature review]. 629 88
To study the biologic behavior and natural history of this rare but challenging tumor faced by oncologists, a clinicopathologic study of 42 patients with histologically proven adrenal cortical carcinoma from Roswell Park Memorial Institute (1929--1977) was done. These constituted .04% of all cancer cases and 0.2% of all autopsy cases. Age range was 3--74 years with median of 53 years; female to male ratio was 1.5 to 1. Clinical manifestations were: abdominal mass (36%),
metastatic disease
(30%), hormonal excess (17%) and weakness with lethargy (17%). Nine of ten functioning tumors were seen in female patients. Tumors arose in left adrenal in 26 patients, right adrenal in 12, and in four the site could not be determined because of bilateral presence of cancer. Median duration of symptoms was six months. At diagnosis, 52% had distant
metastases
, 41% had locally advanced tumor and 7% had tumor confined to adrenal. Sixteen patients underwent "curative" resection. Tumor diameter ranged from 1--30 cm with median of 10 cm. Of 28 patients who received different chemotherapeutic regimens, three (11%) had objective response; four of ten patients had objective response to radiation therapy. Overall median and five-year survival rates were 14 months and 24%. Prolonged survival (P less than .05) was noted in women, patients who had "curative" resection, a disease-free interval of more than 12 months, and tumor size greater than 10 cm diameter. Patients with functional tumors had longer median survival than those with
non-functional
ones (28 vs. 12), but P value was greater than .05. A second primary cancer was noted in 22.4% of cases, breast and lymphoma being the most common. At autopsy in 31 patients, the most common metastatic sites were retroperitoneal lymph nodes 68%, lung 71%, liver 42%, and bone 26%. To improve survival, an aggressive surgical approach is recommended to extirpate the tumor with involved organs and retroperitoneal lymph nodes. Adrenal carcinoma should be suspected in patients with
metastatic cancer
with an occult primary.
...
PMID:Natural history of adrenal cortical carcinoma: a clinicopathologic study of 42 patients. 722 9
Between 1957 and 1978 the authors operated 15 patients with an adrenal tumor. This series includes six pheochromocytomas, seven cortical tumors, one adrenal cyst and one neuroblastoma. The specific diagnostic and therapeutic problems encountered in this group of different type tumors are discussed. In the group of six pheochromocytomas one was benign but recurred nine years later, one was a paraganglioma and one a malignant pheochromocytoma with functional glandular
metastases
. The seven cortical tumors are divided into one functional benign tumor, two
non-functional
benign tumors of which one was located outside the adrenal gland, two
non-functional
malignant tumors, one functional malignant tumor and one syndrome of Conn.
...
PMID:[Surgical experiences with adrenal tumors (author's transl)]. 724 96
A 49-year-old female presented with a low abdominal tumor. Before operation, she had neither evidence of androgen excess nor abnormal tumor marker values, but US, CT and MRI findings strongly suggested the possibility of a malignant ovarian tumor. Her operative findings were as follows: a goose egg-sized main tumor in the low abdomen, with a walnut-sized tumor in the right side, which grew around the right ureter, causing right
non-functional
kidney. Pathological examination revealed her tumor was a very rare type of malignant Sertoli-Leidig cell tumor with pelvic lymph nodes
metastases
. Most patients with this disease usually have good prognoses, but with metastasis or recurrence, no therapy is as effective as in epithelial ovarian cancer. In this case, we selected a new combination chemotherapy of CBDCA, Etoposide and Epirubicin, considering current changes in the chemotherapy for ovarian germ cell tumors and Sertoli-Leidig cell tumors of testis. Now, 1 year and 4 months after operation, she has no evidence of recurrence or metastasis. This study proposes a new, presumably more effective chemotherapy for an ovarian malignant Sertoli-Leidig cell tumor.
...
PMID:[A case of ovarian malignant Sertoli-Leidig cell tumor treated with CBDCA, etoposide and epirubicin chemotherapy]. 757 20
The stability of the mammalian genome depends on the proper function of G1 and G2 cell cycle control mechanisms. Two tumor suppressors, p53 and retinoblastoma (Rb), play key roles in progression from G1 into S-phase. We address the mechanisms by which these proteins mediate a G1 arrest in response to DNA damage and limiting metabolic conditions. Gamma-irradiation induced a prolonged, p53-dependent G1 arrest associated with a long-term increase in the levels of the cdk-inhibitor p21WAFl/Cipl (p21). Microinjection of linear plasmid DNA also caused a G1 arrest. The p53-dependent arrest induced by inhibitors of UMP biosynthesis was reversible and occurred in the absence of detectable DNA damage. Both arrest mechanisms contribute to limiting the formation and propagation of damaged genomes. Cells containing mutant p53 but wild-type Rb do not generate methotrexate (Mtx) resistant variants. However, pre-treatment with DNA damaging agents prior to drug selection resulted in resistant clones containing amplified dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) genes, suggesting that DNA breakage is a rate limiting step for gene amplification. The Mtx-induced arrest did not occur in cells with
non-functional
Rb. Rb acts as a negative regulator of the E2F transcription factors, and Rb-deficient primary mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) produced elevated levels of mRNA and protein for key E2F target genes. Failure to prevent entry into S-phase in Rb-/- MEFs exposed to DNA-damaging or nutrient limiting conditions caused apoptosis and correlated with p53 induction. Taken together, these findings indicate a link between p53 and Rb function and suggest that their coordination insures correct entry into S-phase, minimizing the emergence of genetic variants.
Cancer
Metastasis
Rev 1995 Mar
PMID:Genetic instability as a consequence of inappropriate entry into and progression through S-phase. 760 22
Information about epidemiology, natural history and prognostic factors of adrenocortical carcinoma in Italy is extremely scarce. We report here 35 patients of adult age who were referred to our institution in the last two decades. Nine patients had non functioning, and 26 had functioning tumors. In
non-functional
tumors initial symptoms were abdominal pain in 90% of cases, fever, weakness, malaise, weight loss in 30%. Only one patient was asymptomatic. Of patients with functioning tumors, 18 presented with Cushing's syndrome, 6 with Cushing's syndrome and virilization, 1 with Cushing's syndrome and feminilization and 1 with hyperaldosteronism. Twenty-two of all cases (63%) had
metastases
at diagnosis; most frequent sites were lung, liver and distant lymph nodes. The results of tumor staging, according to MacFarlane system, were: stage I, 1 patient (3%); stage II, 10 patients (28%); stage III-IV, 24 patients (69%). Twenty-six out of 35 patients underwent removal of the mass with complete adrenalectomy. Twelve patients received mitotane alone; 8 mitotane and chemotherapy; 5 chemotherapy alone; 2 radiotherapy associated with mitotane or chemotherapy; 1 anthalgic radiotherapy. Survival time ranged from 1 to 108 months. One-year survival rate was 60%, and 5-year survival rate was 10%. Lower survival rate compared with that reported from other countries is probably related to the referring of patients at very advanced stages of disease. Early recognition and referral, in addition to optimization of therapeutic protocols by multicenter studies, may improve prognostic aspects.
...
PMID:Adrenocortical carcinoma: epidemiology and natural history. 765 Dec 87
L-CAM, also known as E-cadherin, is a cell adhesion molecule expressed on the plasma membranes of epithelial cells at the intercellular interface. From in vitro gene transfection experiments the idea has been conceived that loss of L-CAM expression might be related to the invasive capacity as well as metastatic potential of tumour cells. In several tumours a relation between the grade of differentiation and L-CAM expression has been noticed: loss of differentiation appears to be associated with loss of L-CAM immunoreactivity. Also, in lymph node
metastases
of poorly differentiated carcinomas loss of L-CAM expression was demonstrated. In this study we describe L-CAM expression in lymphogenous and haematogenous
metastases
of large bowel adenocarcinomas, using an indirect immunoperoxidase method with the monoclonal anti-L-CAM antibody 6F9. All the
metastases
studied--lymphogenous as well as haematogenous--demonstrated L-CAM immunoreactivity in a pattern comparable to that of primary tumours. Intratumour heterogeneity in expression was noted, with normal intercellular, apical (
non-functional
), and focally negative areas in the same tumour. The data indicate that primary tumours and their
metastases
do not differ strikingly in their pattern of L-CAM expression. This would be consistent with transient rather than constitutive down-regulation of L-CAM in invasive and
metastatic cancer
cells.
...
PMID:L-CAM expression in lymph node and liver metastases of colorectal carcinomas. 816 49
Cytotoxic drugs currently remain as the basis for the chemotherapy of
metastatic cancer
. Why they fail to kill sufficient tumour cells in the major human solid cancers, such as the carcinomas, is suggested in this review to be due to the inherent inability of these cells to engage apoptosis after drug-induced damage. As a paradigm for drug resistant cancers, the resistance of bladder carcinoma cell lines to DNA damaging drugs is described here in terms of their response to the topoisomerase II poison etoposide. 60%-70% of bladder carcinomas have mutant p53; this can prevent the detection of and response to DNA damage. In vitro studies with a bladder carcinoma cell line containing a wild type p53 showed that it underwent a G1 checkpoint after etoposide, potentially allowing DNA damage repair, as well as apoptosis. In lines with mutant or
non-functional
p53 there is no checkpoint and no apoptosis. All lines showed constitutive expression of bcl-2 and bcl-XL (the suppressors of apoptosis) with low and non-inducible levels of bax (a promoter of apoptosis). Taken together, this menu of gene expression is more favourable to survival than apoptosis after the imposition of drug-induced DNA damage and may contribute to their inherent drug resistance.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and cancer chemotherapy. 895 Apr 79
With the introduction of longer-acting somatostatin analogues symptomatic relief is easy to achieve in patients with functionally active endocrine tumours and will be further facilitated by still longer-acting formulations. The consequences of gastric acid hypersecretion in patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome can be prevented by all proton-pump inhibitors currently on the market. Despite the various antiproliferative strategies that have been offered to patients with
metastatic disease
, available data are controversial and, more importantly, are supported by few prospective and controlled studies. Most experts agree that surgery with curative extirpation of the primary in the absence of
metastases
and tumour debulking in
metastatic disease
should be intended wherever possible. Controversy concerns residual disease. According to our view, any further antiproliferative strategy should consider the growth characteristics and biology of a given tumour (Figure 4). In the case of rapid progression, chemotherapy should be offered if tumours originate from the pancreas or reveal an undifferentiated histology. In contrast, chemotherapy should not be offered to patients with well-differentiated
non-functional
or functional tumours (carcinoid syndrome) arising from the intestine. The same applies for patients with tumours with no or only slow growth within an given observation period of 3-12 months. These patients should be treated only symptomatically. Patients with tumours of slow progression might favourably respond to long-acting somatostatin analogues. We start with octreotide and offer patients not responding to octreotide monotherapy additional IFN alpha. If further tumour progression takes place, hepatic artery embolization is the next step (Figure 5) followed by chemotherapy, the latter in patients with tumours of pancreatic origin only. This strategy recognizes the severity of side-effects of the different therapeutic modalities and starts with octreotide because of its very few side-effects. Other groups start with chemoembolization followed by octreotide, alpha-interferon or its combinations (Ahlman et al, 1996). Ongoing studies will, it is hoped, answer the question of the ideal sequence of therapeutic strategies. Every available patient with metastasised gastrointestinal endocrine tumours should be included in one of the ongoing European multicentre trials.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal endocrine tumours: medical management. 911 20
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>