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)

Our objective was to determine pretreatment factors with an independent impact on survival after adjusting for response to preoperative chemotherapy and to describe parameters predictive for achieving a pathological complete remission (pCR) after preoperative chemotherapy containing an anthracycline. We performed univariate and multivariate analyses to describe the impact of the following pretreatment characteristics of 240 primary breast cancer patients who received preoperative chemotherapy containing an anthracycline at our institution on disease-free survival (DFS), distant disease-free survival (DDFS) and overall survival (OS): age, stage, clinical tumor size, clinical nodal status, grading, and expression of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, Her2/neu, Ki67, Bcl-2 and p53. Afterwards, the response to preoperative chemotherapy was added to the multivariate model in order to evaluate which pretreatment parameters retained their prognostic impact. In addition, univariate analysis was performed to describe pretreatment variables predictive for achieving a pCR. With a median follow-up of 6.4 years (range 0-10.4), only grading retained its independent impact on DFS, DDFS and OS [hazard ratio (HR) 1.5, 1.7 and 2.9, respectively; p<0.05] after adjusting for the strongest independent prognostic factors pathological T category at surgery (HR 1.6, 1.8 and 1.7, respectively; p<0.001) and pathological N category at surgery (HR 2.3, 2.4 and 2.1, respectively; p<0.001). Predictive factors for the achievement of pCR (p<0.05) were age under 35 years, lower stage or smaller clinical tumor size and higher expression of Bcl-2 at diagnosis. We conclude that only grading retained its independent prognostic impact on DFS, DDFS and OS after adjusting for pathological response of breast tumor and axillary lymph node metastases to preoperative chemotherapy. According to our data, it could be hypothesized that young patients with early tumor stage and small primary tumors might profit most from preoperative chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Only grading has independent impact on breast cancer survival after adjustment for pathological response to preoperative chemotherapy. 1507 68

Breast cancer represents a major health problem, with more than 1,000,000 new cases and 370,000 deaths yearly worldwide. In the last decade, in spite of an increasing incidence, breast cancer mortality has been declining in the majority of developed countries. This is the combined result of better education, widespread screening programmes and more efficacious adjuvant treatments. Better knowledge of breast cancer biology now allows the cosmetic, physical and psychological consequences of radical mastectomy to be spared in the majority of breast cancer patients. Use of the sentinel node technique is rapidly expanding and this will further reduce the extent and the consequences of surgery. Several clinico-pathological factors are used to discriminate between patients at low (<10%), average (10-40%) and high risk of relapse. Nodal status, tumour size, tumour grade and age are accepted universally as important factors to define risk categories. Newer factors such as uPA/PAI-1, HERer2-neu, proliferative indices and gene expression profile are promising and will allow better discrimination between patients at different risk. Endocrine manipulation with tamoxifen, ovarian ablation or both is the preferred option in the case of endocrine-responsive tumours. Tamoxifen administered for 5 years is the standard treatment for postmenopausal patients; tamoxifen plus ovarian ablation is more effective than tamoxifen alone for premenopausal women. Recent data demonstrate that, for postmenopausal patients, the aromatase inhibitors are superior to tamoxifen, with a different safety profile. At present, anastrozole can be used in the adjuvant setting in cases of tamoxifen intolerance or toxicity. Chemotherapy is the treatment of choice for steroid receptor-negative tumours. Polychemotherapy is superior to single agents and anthracycline-containing regimens are superior to CMF. Six courses of FEC or FAC or the sequential administration of four doses of anthracycline followed by four of CMF are the recommended regimens. New regimens including the taxanes have produced a further improvement in risk reduction and are reasonable therapeutic options. The taxanes have been approved for adjuvant therapy in the USA, while European approval is pending. Combined endocrine-chemotherapy is the standard adjuvant treatment in high-risk patients with endocrine-responsive tumours. Endocrine manipulation is usually administered after completion of the chemotherapy programme. For HER2-neu overexpressing tumours, several rapidly accruing trials are exploring the potential additive effect of trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody directed against the extramembrane portion of the HER2 receptor. Primary chemotherapy is increasingly used in the treatment of locally advanced and operable breast cancer, with increased rates of breast-conserving surgery. A proportion of patients achieve a pathological complete response and these patients have significantly better long-term outcomes. Twenty-five to forty percent of breast cancer patients develop distant metastases. At this stage the disease is incurable; however, treatments can assure a significant prolongation of survival, symptomatic control and maintenance of quality of life. In the case of hormone receptor positivity and in the absence of visceral, life-threatening disease, endocrine manipulation is the treatment of choice. Active treatments include tamoxifen, ovarian ablation, aromatase inhibitors, pure anti-oestrogens and progestins. Aromatase inhibitors are the most active agents, but the choice and the sequence of endocrine therapies are also dictated by prior adjuvant treatment. Chemotherapy has to be preferred in cases of receptor-negative tumours, acquired resistance to hormones and aggressive visceral disease. Combination regimens are usually associated with higher response rates and sometimes survival prolongation, and this approach should be recommended in young patients with good performance status and visceral disease. On the other hand, single agents have a better tolerability profile and should be tand should be the treatment of choice when a careful balance between activity and tolerability is needed. For HER2-neu positive tumours, the combination of trastuzumab and chemotherapy is significantly superior to chemotherapy alone in terms of both response rates and survival. Other useful palliative treatments include bisphosphonates for the control of metastatic bone disease and radiotherapy for painful bone lesions or local relapses.
...
PMID:The curability of breast cancer and the treatment of advanced disease. 1510 48

We report 62 cases of invasive micropapillary carcinoma of the breast characterized by delicate pseudopapillary structures lacking a fibrovascular core and by tubuloalveolar structures freely floating in clear, empty spaces. All patients but 1 were women (median age, 57 years; range, 25-89 years). Tumor size ranged from 0.7 to 10 cm (median, 2.8 cm); 54 (87%) were grade 3. Psammoma bodies were identified in 29 (47%). Focal to massive lymphatic permeation was present in 39 (63%). Architectural features were retained in the node metastases, dermal lymphatics, and recurrences. Fifty-six patients (90%) had metastatic axillary nodes: 18 tumors were estrogen receptor-positive (32%); 11 were progesterone receptor-positive (20%); HER2/neu was overexpressed in 53 (95%) and p53 in 39 (70%). A peculiar immunoreactivity for MUC1 limited to the cytoplasmic membrane oriented toward the stroma and an absence of immunoreactivity for E-cadherin in the same side of the cytoplasmic membrane indicated inversion of cell polarization and a disturbance in the cell adhesion molecules. Of 41 patients with available follow-up, 29 (71%) had local recurrence (mean, 30 months) and 20 (49%) died of disease. These results underscore the aggressive behavior and poor prognosis of this breast carcinoma variant. Aggressive preoperative neoadjuvant chemotherapy should be considered.
...
PMID:Invasive micropapillary carcinoma of the breast: clinicopathologic study of 62 cases of a poorly recognized variant with highly aggressive behavior. 1519 58

The amplification and/or overexpression of the c-erbB-2/neu oncogene may play a role in tumor development and progression. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the prognostic value of p185 protein in colorectal cancer using immunohistochemical techniques. We analyzed 106 colorectal tumor tissue specimens from patients who had been operated on by the same surgeon and subjected to a median follow-up of 3 years. Thirty-three per cent of patients showed p185 overexpression related to an advanced stage of the disease. In patients with adenocarcinoma tumors of the colon without distant metastases, p185 detection was found to be of clinical prognostic relevance (p = 0.06).
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of the p185 protein in colorectal cancer. 1525 19

The clinical effects of targeting Her-2/neu in prostate carcinoma are not known. This study explores the feasibility of molecular profiling to determine the correlation between Her-2/neu expression and hormonal sensitivity. Patients with progressive androgen-independent prostate carcinoma were eligible to participate in the study. Her-2/neu expression was assessed on pretreatment tissue specimens and on bone marrow obtained in progressive androgen-independent disease. Her-2/neu expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry and by fluorescence in situ hybridization in a consecutive series of 26 progressive androgen-independent prostate cancer patients. Twenty four bone marrow biopsy specimens and 16 prostate biopsies from 26 patients were analyzed. These biopsies were categorized by androgen sensitivity at the time of the biopsy. In total, 90% of specimens from bone marrow were Her-2/neu positive, and 10% of the specimens were Her-2/neu negative. Of the prostate biopsies, all were from patients with androgen-dependent disease. Three of 13 androgen-dependent prostate biopsies (23%) overexpressed Her-2/neu. Of the 10 tumor samples analyzed by fluorescence in situ hybridization, genomic amplification of the Her-2/neu locus was not detected in any of the metastatic prostate tumors. Her-2/neu expression varies with the clinical state of patients with prostate carcinoma: Accurate Her-2/neu profiling requires sampling metastatic tissue in patients with metastatic disease. Her-2/neu sampling from metastatic prostate carcinoma is not feasible until more reliable and practical methods can be developed.
...
PMID:Her-2/neu expression in prostate cancer: a dynamic process? 1526 47

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been extended to earlier stages of breast carcinoma in order to increase the rate of breast conservation by downstaging. Tumour regression can be observed in up to 80% of the cases and the chemosensitivity of the individual tumour can be studied in vivo. Moreover therapy induced regression has been established as an independent prognostic parameter. Characteristic effects of chemotherapy include reduction in cell number, fibrosis, vacuolization of cytoplasm and increased nuclear pleomorphism. Grading, typing and immunohistochemical properties of the carcinomas remain unchanged in the majority of cases. Predictive for the chemosensitivity of tumours are a high nuclear grade, overexpression of Her-2-neu, lack of estrogen receptor expression and lymph node metastases.
...
PMID:[Morphological response to therapy of breast carcinoma]. 1532 18

Receptor tyrosine kinases play an important role in malignant transformation of epithelial cells by activating signal transduction pathways important for proliferation, invasion and metastasis. In a pilot study (n = 40), we evaluated expression of the c-Met and Her2/neu receptor tyrosine kinases and the c-Met ligand hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) in primary breast cancers and their lymph node metastases using both conventional immunohistochemistry and confocal immunofluorescence. Neither c-Met and HGF/SF nor Her2/neu expression correlated with established prognostic factors such as age, lymph node involvement, estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), tumor size, or grade. Both staining methods confirmed a significant correlation between c-Met overexpression and a high risk of disease progression. Furthermore, among tumors with c-Met overexpression, only 50% also overexpress Her2/neu, thus identifying a subset of patients with aggressive disease in addition to Her2/neu. Median disease-free survival in patients with c-Met overexpressing tumors was 8 months compared to 53 months when c-Met expression was low (p = 0.037; RR = 3.0). This significant impact of c-Met on tumor aggressiveness independent of Her2/neu was also confirmed by multivariate analysis. In conclusion, the role of c-Met expression as a prognostic variable and consequently as an interesting target for novel therapeutic approaches deserves further analysis in a larger cohort of patients.
...
PMID:C-Met overexpression in node-positive breast cancer identifies patients with poor clinical outcome independent of Her2/neu. 1545 88

Androgen withdrawal is the only effective therapy for patients with advanced prostate cancer, but progression to androgen independence ultimately occurs in almost all patients. Novel therapeutic strategies targeting molecular mechanisms that mediate resistance to hormonal and chemotherapeutic treatment are highly warranted. Here, we aimed to evaluate the expression of potential therapeutic targets in advanced prostate cancer. A tissue microarray (TMA) containing samples from 535 tissue blocks was constructed, including benign prostatic hyperplasia as controls (n = 65), prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN; n = 78), clinically localized prostate cancers (n = 181), as well as hormone-refractory local recurrences (n = 120) and distant metastases (n = 91). The expression of 13 different proteins was analyzed using immunohistochemistry (Bcl-2, p53, ILK, Syndecan-1, MUC-1, EGFR, HER2/neu, HSP-90, Ep-CAM, MMP-2, CD-10, CD-117 and Ki67). Significant overexpression in hormone-refractory prostate cancer and metastatic tissue compared to localized prostate cancer was found for Ki67 (64% vs. 9%), Bcl-2 (11% vs. 1%), p53 (35% vs. 4%), Syndecan-1 (38% vs. 3%), EGFR (16% vs. 1%) and HER2/neu (16% vs. 0%). Overexpression of CD-117 was restricted to 1 single metastasis. All other markers did not show relevant differences in expression between subgroups. Taken together, p53, Bcl-2, Syndecan-1, EGFR and HER2/neu are preferentially expressed in hormone-refractory and metastatic prostate cancer. Selected inhibition of these targets might offer a strategy to treat advanced tumors and prevent further progression. Treatment decisions should not be based on findings in primary tumors but rather on tissues from recurrent or metastatic lesions.
...
PMID:Expression patterns of potential therapeutic targets in prostate cancer. 1547 3

Tamoxifen treatment substantially improves the 10-year survival of women with estrogen-receptor (ER)-alpha-positive tumors. However, approximately one-third of all breast cancer patients with ER-alpha-positive tumors progress on antiestrogen therapy. The molecular mechanism(s) involved in antiestrogen-resistant phenotype of breast carcinoma is not completely understood. The PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome Ten) gene is a novel candidate tumor suppressor that plays an important role in cell cycle regulation and apoptosis by regulating Protein kinase-B/Akt activity. Previous studies have shown that PTEN downregulation in breast cancer is associated with high-grade tumor, distant metastases and poorer disease-free survival. Decreased PTEN and/or increased protein kinase B/Akt activity in breast cancer cells has recently been associated with resistance to tamoxifen-induced apoptosis. In this study, we have evaluated PTEN expression by immunohistochemistry in 100 tamoxifen-treated ER-alpha-positive breast cancer patients. Reduced PTEN protein expression was associated with shorter relapse-free survival. When stage I patients were analyzed separately, reduced PTEN expression was a strong predictor of both, shorter relapse-free survival and shorter disease-specific survival. An association of reduced PTEN expression with shorter relapse-free survival and disease-specific survival in stage I patients was still observed after stratification by stage, axillary lymph node status, tumor size, grade, and expression of ER-alpha, progesterone receptor, and Her-2/neu. In summary, our results showed a strong association between downregulation of PTEN expression in ER-alpha-positive tumors and failure to tamoxifen treatment.
...
PMID:Reduced PTEN expression predicts relapse in patients with breast carcinoma treated by tamoxifen. 1547 31

The androgen receptor (AR) is implicated in regulation of cellular events in advanced prostate cancer. It is expressed in primary tumours as well as in metastases from patients who failed endocrine therapy. Activation of the AR in metastatic tumours occurs as a result of increased sensitivity of the receptor, point mutations that alter activation spectrum and in response to various nonsteroidal compounds. Peptide growth factors that activate the signalling pathway of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) stimulate AR activity in ligand-independent or synergistic manner. Outcome of nonsteroidal activation depends on cellular and promoter context. AR activation by Her-2/neu is associated with enhanced tumour growth of the LAPC-4 xenograft. The issue whether MAPK or protein kinase Akt involved in growth factor signalling directly phosphorylate the AR is a matter of debate. AR ligand-independent activation by protein kinase A activators was also demonstrated. Under physiological conditions, potentiation of AR activity by low doses of androgen might be of importance in prostate cancer patients who receive endocrine therapy. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and related cytokines also activate AR in a ligand-independent and synergistic manner. IL-6 is a pleiotropic regulator of tumour growth, which in some prostate cancers acts as a paracrine growth inhibitor and in other cases as an autocrine growth stimulator. Activation of the AR by IL-6 requires functional pathways of Janus kinases/signal transducers and activators of transcription factors and MAPK. Studies on AR co-activators implicated in ligand-independent activation may further improve understanding of cross-talk between signalling pathways.
...
PMID:Androgen receptor cross-talk with cell signalling pathways. 1551 41


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10