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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of the present study was to examine the expression of
p53 protein
in malignant melanomas of the nodular sub-type, with special reference to the role of
p53
alterations in the development of
metastases
. Increased expression of
p53 protein
was found in 29 of 30 cases using PAb1801 monoclonal antibody (MAb) and flow-cytometric detection on archival material. A large proportion of the cells were positive in a majority of the cases. The level of expression was not correlated to DNA ploidy or to subsequent development of local
metastases
. However, a significant decrease in
p53 protein
expression was observed in metastatic lesions, as compared with the corresponding primary tumors. Our results indicate that
p53
alterations may be an early event in melanoma development, since almost all cases were affected, and that metastatic spread appears to be parallelled by decreased
p53 protein
expression.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 protein in cutaneous melanoma. 150 Feb 18
Tumorigenesis is a multistep process involving mutations of dominantly acting proto-oncogenes and mutations and loss-of-function mutations of tumor suppressor genes. Some of these mutations may be inherited, but most of them are acquired. Models for the sequential steps of the genetic changes involved in tumor development have been proposed for certain cancers, such as colon cancer. In the case of ovarian cancer, relatively little is known about the genetic events associated with the initiation or subsequent progression and
metastases
of the tumor. Cytogenetic analysis has revealed a high incidence of both structural and numerical chromosome changes, and the extent of these changes seems to increase with tumor progression. Oncogene activations of the proto-oncogenes K-ras, c-myc and c-erbB-2 have been found more frequently in aggressive ovarian tumors and may be associated with poor survival. Tumor-specific allele loss involving putative tumor suppressor genes has been observed for loci at chromosomes 11p, 17p, and 17q,--loci commonly deleted in other cancers too. A relatively high incidence of allelic loss on chromosome 6q appears to be specific to ovarian carcinoma. Familial breast/ovarian cancer has been suggested to map to chromosome 8q. Recently we have found a germ-line mutation in the tumor suppressor gene
p53
in a family with breast- and ovarian cancers, indicating that this is the predisposing gene in this family. Genetic changes important for the etiology of ovarian cancers seem to involve both somatic mutations of oncogenes and somatic or germ-line inactivation of tumor suppressor genes.
...
PMID:Oncogenesis in ovarian cancer. 150 89
The tumor-suppressor
protein p53
is over-expressed in a large fraction of squamous-cell carcinomas of the larynx (LSCCs).
p53
overexpression is dependent upon the synthesis of mutated versions of the protein and has been associated with the malignant progression of certain tumor types. In order to examine the prognostic value of
p53
immunodetection in LSCCs, we performed a retrospective analysis on a selected series of tumors, using the PAb 1801 and CM1 antibodies. No significant difference in the frequency of
p53
over-expression was observed between tumors from patients with early relapse (67%) and those who had been disease-free for more than 5 years (84%). The lack of correlation of
p53
immunoreactivity with clinical stage and differentiation grade of LSCCs, together with the coordinated expression of
p53
in primary tumors and the corresponding lymph-node
metastases
, indicate that
p53
over-expression is probably unrelated to the biological aggressiveness of these tumors. In addition, the detection of
p53
immunostaining in pre-invasive areas as well as in preneoplastic lesions suggests that
p53
abnormalities probably constitute a very early event in LSCC development.
...
PMID:p53 over-expression is an early event in the development of human squamous-cell carcinoma of the larynx: genetic and prognostic implications. 152 6
The molecular genetic alterations in colorectal carcinoma are among the best understood of any common human cancer. Identified abnormalities include both dominant-acting oncogenes (ras, myc, src) and suppressor genes which undergo inactivation or deletion (deleted in colorectal carcinoma gene [DCC],
p53
, adenomatous polyposis coli gene [APC], and probably loci on chromosomes 1p and 22q). Accumulation of multiple abnormalities is evident in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence with a preferential order, and alteration of DNA methylation is an especially early event. Identification of molecular genetic markers useful for classification and staging of colorectal carcinoma is in its infancy. Deletion of the
p53
gene on chromosome 17p, deletion of the DCC gene on 18q, and high fractional allelic loss (fraction of evaluable nonacrocentric autosomal arms with deletion) have been associated with distant
metastases
and with poorer prognosis in patients without initial evidence of disseminated disease. Additional studies are needed to determine the possible role of these alterations in clinical management.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic alterations as potential prognostic indicators in colorectal carcinoma. 154 Sep
Immunohistochemical staining for the
p53 protein
was performed in 107 snap frozen primary endometrial adenocarcinomas and 15 benign uterine tissues using monoclonal antibody PAb1801. No staining was seen in benign samples, whereas intense nuclear staining of cancer cells consistent with overexpression of the
p53 protein
was observed in 22 of 107 cancers (21%).
p53
overexpression was more frequent in advanced (Stage III/IV) cancers (41%) than in early (Stage I/II) cancers (9%) (P less than 0.001), and also was associated with nonendometrioid histology (P = 0.008), positive peritoneal cytology (P = 0.01), extrauterine
metastases
(P = 0.003), and negative progesterone receptor status (P = 0.04). To confirm the relationship between
p53
overexpression and mutation,
p53 mRNA
from 8 cancers was reverse transcribed and amplified using the polymerase chain reaction. DNA sequencing revealed point mutations in each of the 5 cancers that overexpressed
p53
, whereas the wild-type sequence was found in 3 cancers that did not overexpress the protein. Each of the 5 mutations resulted in an amino acid substitution in a highly conserved region of the
p53
gene where mutations have been found in other cancers. Further studies are warranted to determine whether the association between
p53
overexpression and advanced stage disease is due to accumulation of genetic lesions during tumor progression or whether
p53
alterations confer a more virulent phenotype.
...
PMID:Overexpression and mutation of p53 in endometrial carcinoma. 154 Sep 70
Epidermolysis bullosa, a rare genodermatosis, is characterized by increased skin fragility manifest as blistering and sometimes accompanied by scarring. The latter is particularly severe in the recessive dystrophic variant and may be complicated by the development of squamous carcinoma in up to 30% of patients. We have studied 23 such tumours in six patients with this variant, with an anti-serum to
p53 protein
. Twenty-six per cent of the squamous carcinomas labelled positively for mutant-type
p53 protein
. This low figure, however, reflects the large number of well-differentiated tumours in this series, where 14 out of 15 were negative. In the moderate to poorly differentiated examples the positivity rate was 63%. Of the three patients in the latter category, one has died from disseminated tumour and another has widespread
metastases
. The findings support the hypothesis that mutant p53 protein expression correlates with poorer tumour differentiation. They also suggest a possible correlation between
p53 protein
expression and tumour behaviour.
...
PMID:Expression of mutant p53 gene in squamous carcinoma arising in patients with recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa. 156 10
Squamous, large cell, and adenocarcinoma, collectively termed non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), are diagnosed in approximately 75% of patients with lung cancer in the United States. The treatment of these three tumor cell types is approached in virtually identical fashion because, in contrast to small cell carcinoma of the lung, NSCLC more frequently presents with localized disease at the time of diagnosis and is thus more often amenable to surgical resection but less frequently responds to chemotherapy and irradiation. Cigarette smoking is etiologically related to the development of NSCLC in the great majority of cases. Genetic mutations in dominant oncogenes such as K-ras, loss of genetic material on chromosomes 3p, 11p, and 17p, and deletions or mutations in tumor suppressor genes such as rb and
p53
have been documented in NSCLC tumors and tumor cell lines. NSCLC is diagnosed because of symptoms related to the primary tumor or regional or distant
metastases
, as an incidental finding on chest radiograph, or rarely because of a paraneoplastic syndrome such as hypercalcemia or hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy. Screening smokers with periodic chest radiographs and sputum cytologic examination has not been shown to reduce mortality. The diagnosis of NSCLC is usually established by fiberoptic bronchoscopy or percutaneous fine-needle aspiration, by biopsy of a regional or distant metastatic site, or at the time of thoracotomy. Pathologically, NSCLC arises in a setting of bronchial mucosal metaplasia and dysplasia that progressively increase over time. Squamous carcinoma more often presents as a central endobronchial lesion, while large cell and adenocarcinoma have a tendency to arise in the lung periphery and invade the pleura. Once the diagnosis is made, the extent of tumor dissemination is determined. Since most NSCLC patients who survive 5 years or longer have undergone surgical resection of their cancers, the focus of the staging process is to determine whether the patient is a candidate for thoracotomy with curative intent. The dominant prognostic factors in NSCLC are extent of tumor dissemination, ambulatory or performance status, and degree of weight loss. Stages I and II NSCLC, which are confined within the pleural reflection, are managed by surgical resection whenever possible, with approximate 5-year survival of 45% and 25%, respectively. Patients with stage IIIa cancers, in which the primary tumor has extended through the pleura or metastasized to ipsilateral or subcarinal lymph nodes, can occasionally be surgically resected but are often managed with definitive thoracic irradiation and have 5-year survival of approximately 15%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-small cell lung cancer. Part I: Biology, diagnosis, and staging. 164 34
We explored the state of the
p53
gene in gastric cancer. Using one or more methods, we examined 15 specimens from primary carcinomas (14 tumors, one cell line), five cell lines derived from
metastases
, and seven paired samples of nonmalignant gastric mucosa. Sequence analyses of complementary DNA containing the entire
p53
gene open reading frame demonstrated abnormalities in one of five samples from primary tumors and in all five samples from
metastases
. The single cell line derived from a primary carcinoma had no abnormality of the gene. The six abnormalities included four point mutations, one base-pair deletion resulting in a frame shift, and a 24 base-pair deletion caused by an intronic point mutation (as determined by sequence analysis of genomic DNA). Four of the six mutations mapped to regions highly conserved among species or involved in simian virus 40 T-antigen binding. Restriction fragment length polymorphism studies confirmed that chromosome 17p allelic deletions occur only in a minority of primary tumors, but that they may occur more frequently in
metastases
. Northern blotting and ribonuclease protection assays detected only a fraction of the
p53
gene abnormalities detected by sequencing. Our findings indicate that mutations of the
p53
gene are relatively rare in primary gastric tumors but appear to be relatively frequent in cell lines derived from metastatic lesions. Our results may help in understanding the molecular events associated with progression and metastasis in gastric carcinoma.
...
PMID:Occurrence of p53 gene abnormalities in gastric carcinoma tumors and cell lines. 167 61
A prospective study analysed the prognostic value of nm23-H1 allelic deletions in colorectal cancer. Of 21 patients with no evidence of distant
metastases
at initial operation, 11 showed nm23-H1 allelic deletions (including 1 homozygous deletion); 10 had no nm23-H1 deletions. After median follow-up of 25 months, distant
metastases
had developed in 8 of 11 (73%) patients with nm23-H1 deletions but in only 2 of 10 (20%) without nm23-H1 deletions (p less than 0.03). Tests with probe YNZ 22.1, near
p53
, showed no significant association with distant
metastases
. nm23-H1 may be, or may be located near, a late-acting suppressor gene in colorectal carcinoma, in which deletions may have prognostic value.
...
PMID:Association of nm23-H1 allelic deletions with distant metastases in colorectal carcinoma. 167 68
Squamous, large cell, and adenocarcinoma, collectively termed non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), are diagnosed in approximately 75% of patients with lung cancer in the United States. The treatment of these three tumor cell types is approached in virtually identical fashion because, in contrast to small cell carcinoma of the lung, NSCLC more frequently presents with localized disease at the time of diagnosis and is thus more often amenable to surgical resection but less frequently responds to chemotherapy and irradiation. Cigarette smoking is etiologically related to the development of NSCLC in the great majority of cases. Genetic mutations in dominant oncogenes such as K-ras, loss of genetic material on chromosomes 3p, 11p, and 17p, and deletions or mutations in tumor suppressor genes such as rb and
p53
have been documented in NSCLC tumors and tumor cell lines. NSCLC is diagnosed because of symptoms related to the primary tumor or regional or distant
metastases
, as an incidental finding on chest radiograph, or rarely because of a paraneoplastic syndrome such as hypercalcemia or hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy. Screening smokers with periodic chest radiographs and sputum cytologic examination has not been shown to reduce mortality. The diagnosis of NSCLC is usually established by fiberoptic bronchoscopy or percutaneous fine-needle aspiration, by biopsy of a regional or distant metastatic site, or at the time of thoracotomy. Pathologically, NSCLC arises in a setting of bronchial mucosal metaplasia and dysplasia that progressively increase over time. Squamous carcinoma more often presents as a central endobronchial lesion, while large cell and adenocarcinoma have a tendency to arise in the lung periphery and invade the pleura. Once the diagnosis is made, the extent of tumor dissemination is determined. Since most NSCLC patients who survive 5 years or longer have undergone surgical resection of their cancers, the focus of the staging process is to determine whether the patient is a candidate for thoracotomy with curative intent. The dominant prognostic factors in NSCLC are extent of tumor dissemination, ambulatory or performance status, and degree of weight loss. Stages I and II NSCLC, which are confined within the pleural reflection, are managed by surgical resection whenever possible, with approximate 5-year survival of 45% and 25%, respectively. Patients with stage IIIa cancers, in which the primary tumor has extended through the pleura or metastasized to ipsilateral or subcarinal lymph nodes, can occasionally be surgically resected but are often managed with definitive thoracic irradiation and have 5-year survival of approximately 15%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Non-small cell lung cancer. Part II: Treatment. 171 39
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