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)

Amplification of the MDM2 gene, which maps to chromosome band 12q13 and encodes a p53-binding protein, may result in functional inactivation of p53 and has been observed in various bone and soft tissue sarcomas. Published studies have included few cases of Ewing's sarcoma (ES) or peripheral neuroectodermal tumour (PNET), a tumour group in which alterations of the p53 pathway have so far not been extensively studied. We examined two ES cell lines, RD-ES and SK-ES-1, and 30 specimens from 27 patients (24 ES, 6 PNET; 19 primary, 4 local recurrence, 7 metastasis) for MDM2 gene amplification by Southern blot analysis. All 30 clinical specimens had been confirmed to contain sufficient ES/PNET DNA by the demonstration of a rearrangement of the t(11;22)-associated EWS gene using an EWS cDNA probe on the same blots. MDM2 gene amplification was detected in 3 of 30 specimens (10 per cent), including two ES and one PNET, but in neither of the cell lines. The three cases with amplification were morphologically typical primary tumours. Two of the three cases also showed co-amplification of the CDK4 gene, which encodes a cyclin-dependent kinase and also maps to band 12q13. Clinically, all three cases had metastatic disease at diagnosis, compared with only 1 of 15 MDM2-negative cases where the primary tumour was studied. The difference was statistically significant (P = 0.005), suggesting an association of MDM2 amplification with advanced stage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:MDM2 and CDK4 gene amplification in Ewing's sarcoma. 773 17

The development of cancer is a multistep process involving accumulation of genetic changes which progressively transform normal cells to neoplastic cells. During the last few years, our understanding and knowledge of the genetic changes involved in ovarian carcinogenesis have increased dramatically. In this review I will focus on karyotypic abnormalities in ovarian cancer and will also refer to molecular studies involving alterations in oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes in ovarian tumorigenesis. Cytogenetic analyses have identified two distinct subgroups. Simple karyotypic changes, trisomy 12 being the most common aberration in this group, are recurrently found in well differentiated ovarian carcinomas. Complex karyotypic abnormalities, including predominantly chromosome losses, deletions and unbalanced translocations, are found in moderately and poorly differentiated carcinomas. The bands and regions most commonly involved in structural rearrangements have been, in decreasing order of frequency, 19p13, 1p36, 1q21, 1q23-25, 3p11-13, 6q21, 19q13, 11p13-15, 11q13, 11q23, 12q24, 12p11-13, and 7p13-22. The finding of identical karyotypic and other genetic changes in tumour samples taken from different sites, such as tumours from both ovaries and omental metastases, indicate that ovarian cancer is of unicentric origin with subsequent metastatic spread giving rise to multiple implants. Molecular genetic changes important in ovarian cancer involve both classes of tumor-associated genes: RAS activation is generally not observed in ovarian cancer. Alterations of MYC1, ERBB2, AKT2, TP53 has been described in some ovarian carcinomas. The temporal relationship of these mutations, i.e. early or late events in ovarian carcinogenesis, remains to be determined.
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PMID:Genetic changes in ovarian cancer. 774 4

Although patients with superficial bladder cancer (Ta, T1) have a generally good prognosis, those of them who have tumours invading muscle or metastatic disease will have a poor clinical prognosis. In the current study, 41 patients undergoing complete transurethral resection for superficial transitional cell cancer of the bladder were investigated for different clinical and biological characteristics as possible prognostic factors: age, sex, previous instillation therapy, immunohistochemical determination of mutational inactivation of p53 tumour suppressor gene (monoclonal antibody pAb 1801) and proliferation rate determined immunohistochemically by staining for PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen; monoclonal antibody PC 10). After a median follow-up of 54 months 7 of 8 patients (87.5%) with more than 20% of cells positive for p53 had disease recurrence, as against only 1 of 33 patients (3%) negative for p53 detection (P < 0.01; Chi-square test). During univariate analysis histological grade (G1 vs G2; P = 0.007), positivity for PCNA (> 60% of cells; P = 0.003) and positivity for p53 (P = 0.001) were significant prognostic factors for disease progression (log rank test), while during multivariate analysis only positivity for p53 was a significant predictor for relapse of bladder cancer (P = 0.0035; multivariate Cox regression analysis).
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PMID:[Value of the proliferation status (PCNA) and p53 immunohistochemistry as a prognostic factor for the clinical course of superficial cancer of the urinary bladder]. 775 87

Bladder cancer is a paradigm of malignancy, representing the spectrum from localized to metastatic disease, and manifesting varied histologic types, including transitional cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and adenocarcinoma. Preclinical and clinical data suggest that a common stem cell of origin gives rise to the different histologic types and that these patterns are of clonal origin. Localized bladder cancer is managed optimally by transurethral resection, with or without adjuvant intravesical chemotherapy. Invasive cancer or relapsed superficial disease may require more radical surgery or radical radiotherapy. In recent years, the evolution of techniques of continent urinary diversion or of bladder replacement has revolutionized the management of invasive disease. However, the 5-year survival for invasive bladder cancer is still approximately 50%, and innovative strategies have been developed, combining definitive local treatment and systemic chemotherapy, in an attempt to improve survival. For patients with metastatic disease, the combination of methotrexate, vinblastine, doxorubicin, and cisplatin (the MVAC regimen) has achieved response rates as high as 70% but with a median survival of only 12 months. Until cure rates are improved, one of the hallmarks of effective management of metastatic disease will remain the provision of thorough and well-structured palliative treatment programs. Recently, the introduction of new agents (such as paclitaxel, gallium, ifosfamide, and gemcitabine) has led to promising response rates, and further clinical trials of these agents alone and in combination are in progress. In addition, an improved understanding of the mechanisms of resistance to treatment, including the implications of the expression of p-glycoprotein, p53 proteins, and other biochemical predictors of outcome, and of strategies to overcome such resistance, may lead to more effective management of advanced disease. Furthermore, real progress will be made only through the application of well-designed clinical trials to test the efficacy and toxicity of the new strategies of treatment.
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PMID:Management of bladder cancer. 776 13

The p53 gene has been correlated with disease progression in a number of human malignancies, and p53 abnormalities are found in a high percentage of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas. The objectives of this study were 1. to correlate p53 expression with disease progression in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN), and 2. to determine whether there are site-specific differences in p53 expression. Primary lesions and/or lymph node metastases from 147 patients with invasive SCCHN were immunostained for p53 overexpression. Expression of p53 was similar (42% versus 43%) in primary lesions and lymph node metastases. Expression also did not vary significantly by site in the head and neck. In conclusion, increased p53 expression did not correlate with disease progression in our series of patients with invasive SCCHN. The finding of a lack of increased expression with disease spread to lymph nodes supports the belief that p53 alterations occur early in head and neck carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Overexpression of the p53 gene in primary and metastatic head and neck carcinomas. 776 53

In order to construct a multivariate model for predicting early recurrence and cancer death for patients with stage I non-small cell lung cancer, 271 consecutive patients (mean age, 63 +/- 8 years) who were diagnosed, treated, and followed at one institution were studied. All patients were clinical stage I with head and chest/abdominal computed tomograms and radionuclide bone scans without evidence of metastatic disease. Pathological material after resection was reviewed to verify histological staging. Follow-up documented the time and location of any recurrence, was a median 56 months in duration, and was complete in all cases. Data recorded included age, sex, smoking history, presenting symptoms, pathological description, and oncoprotein staining for erbB-2 (HER-2/neu), p53, and KI-67 proliferation protein. Immunohistochemistry of oncogene expression was performed on two separate archived paraffin tumor blocks for each patient, with normal lung as control. All analyses were blinded and included Kaplan-Meier survival estimates with Cox proportional hazards regression modeling. Data, including immunohistochemistry, were complete for all 271 patients. Actual 5-year survival was 63% and actuarial 10-year survival was 58%. Significant univariate predictors (P < 0.05) of early recurrence and cancer-death were: male sex; the presence of symptoms; chest pain; type of cough; hemoptysis; tumor size > 3 cm diameter (T2); poor differentiation; vascular invasion; erbB-2 expression; p53 expression; and a higher KI-67 proliferation index (> 5%). An additive oncogene expression curve demonstrated a 5-year survival of 72% for 136 patients without p53 or erbB-2, 58% for 108 patients who expressed either oncogene, and 38% for 27 who expressed both (P < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A prognostic model of recurrence and death in stage I non-small cell lung cancer utilizing presentation, histopathology, and oncoprotein expression. 780 40

Although patients with superficial bladder cancer (Ta, T1) have a generally good prognosis, those patients who develop muscle-invasive tumours or metastatic disease at recurrence do poorly clinically. In the current study 69 patients undergoing complete transurethral resection for superficial transitional cell cancer of the bladder were investigated for different clinical and biological characteristics as possible prognostic factors: age, sex, performance of instillation therapy and immunohistochemical determination of mutational inactivation of p53 tumour-suppressor gene (monoclonal antibody PAb 1801) as well as immunohistochemical determination of the proliferation rate by staining for PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen) (monoclonal antibody PC 10). After a median follow-up of 45.8 months, 12 of 14 patients (85.7%) with more than 20% of cells positive for p53 had disease progression with muscle-invasive growth compared with only one of 55 patients (1.8%) negative for p53 (P < 0.01, chi 2 test). During univariate analysis histological grade (G1 vs G2) (P = 0.0373), positivity for PCNA (> 60% of cells) (P = 0.0033) and positivity for p53 (P < 0.001) were significant prognostic factors for disease progression (log-rank test), while during multivariate analysis only positivity for p53 was a significant predictor for relapse of bladder cancer (P = 0.0029) (multivariate Cox regression analysis). The immunohistochemical detection of mutations of the p53 gene has been demonstrated to be a reliable, easily performed and thereby widely available technique for the investigation of fresh-frozen or paraffin-embedded tumour specimens. The results demonstrate the important role of the p53 tumour-suppressor gene protein in the development and for the progression of bladder cancer. If the high prognostic value of p53 mutations in superficial bladder cancer is confirmed in larger prospective trials, more aggressive therapeutic strategies could be discussed for patients with p53 mutations in their tumour specimens.
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PMID:p53 immunohistochemistry as an independent prognostic factor for superficial transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder. 781 40

Intraductal papillary growth of mucin producing hypersecreting, columnar cells characterizes a group of rare pancreatic exocrine neoplasms which we propose to call intraductal papillary-mucinous tumors (IPMT). We analysed the histopathology of 26 IPMT in relation to gastro-enteropancreatic marker expression, genetic changes and biology. Four IPMT showing only mild dysplasia were considered to be adenomas. Nine tumours displayed moderate dysplasia and were regarded as borderline. Severe dysplasia-carcinoma in situ changes were found in 13 IPMT which were therefore classified as intraductal carcinomas. Six of these carcinomas were frankly invasive and two of these had lymph node metastases. The invasive component resembled mucinous non-cystic carcinoma in all but one tumour which showed a ductal invasion pattern. Immunohistochemically, an intestinal marker type was found in most carcinomas, while gastric type differentiation prevailed among adenomas or borderline tumours. K-ras mutations (seven at codon 12 and one at codon 13) were found in 31% of IPMT (2 adenomas, 1 borderline, 5 carcinomas). Nuclear p53 overexpression was detected in 31% of IPMT (6 carcinomas and 2 borderline IPMT) and correlated with p53 mutations (one at exon 8 and the other at exon 5) in two carcinomas. p53 abnormalities were unrelated to K-ras mutation. c-erbB-2 overexpression was observed in 65% of IPMT, with various grades of dysplasia. Twenty-two of 24 patients are alive and well after a mean post-operative follow-up of 41 months. Only two patients, both with invasive cancer at the time of surgery, died of tumour disease. It is concluded that pancreatic IPMT encompass neoplasms which, in general, have a favorable prognosis, but are heterogeneous in regard to grade of dysplasia and marker expression. Adenoma, borderline tumour, intraductal carcinoma and invasive carcinoma can be differentiated. p53 changes but not K-ras mutation or c-erbB-2 overexpression are related to the grade of malignancy. Most IPMT differ in histological structure, marker expression and behaviour from ductal adenocarcinoma.
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PMID:Intraductal papillary-mucinous tumours represent a distinct group of pancreatic neoplasms: an investigation of tumour cell differentiation and K-ras, p53 and c-erbB-2 abnormalities in 26 patients. 782 Mar

Abnormalities of the tumour suppressor gene p53 have been shown in approximately 60% of advanced gastric adenocarcinomas and it has been suggested that the immunohistochemical finding of increased p53 expression is a prognostic marker in gastric cancer. No studies of early (T1) tumours have been reported. Over expression of p53 protein in 95 early gastric carcinomas and in adjacent mucosa was investigated using immunohistochemistry with antibody CM1. Thirty five per cent of the tumours were positive. The frequency of p53 positivity in tumours of tubular histological type (46%) was significantly higher than that in signet ring tumours (10%) (p = 0.006), and neoplasms that invaded deeply into the submucosa were more frequently positive (45%) than others (30%). Five of eight (62%) T1 tumours with lymph node metastases showed immunoreactive p53. In signet ring tumours, immunopositivity correlated with the frequency of DNA aneuploidy. p53 Over expression was also found in 15% of 26 examples of high grade dysplasia in mucosa adjacent to invasive tumours. No positivity was found in intestinal metaplasia or in normal mucosa. The findings show that immunocytochemically demonstrable over expression of p53 correlates with other morphological markers of aggressiveness in T1 gastric adenocarcinoma. The increasing frequency of p53 immunoreactivity in the sequence of high grade dysplasia-->early gastric cancer-->advanced gastric cancer supports the view that abnormalities of p53 are related to tumour progression in gastric carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Expression of p53 in early (T1) gastric carcinoma and precancerous adjacent mucosa. 782 4

p53 protein and vimentin status were available from immunocytochemical studies of 253 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded invasive ductal not otherwise specified (NOS) carcinomas from patients for whom follow-up data was also on file. For the 127 node-negative patients, multivariate analysis showed a highly significant correlation between p53 and vimentin (P < 0.001), a strong correlation between vimentin and probability of survival to 90 months but only a weak association between p53 and survival to 90 months. p53 also never entered trees of prognostic indicators derived using stepwise regression with Kaplan-Meier statistics for node-negative and node-positive subgroups, while vimentin status dominated the node-negative trunk. In addition, p53 and vimentin status were analysed versus the site of the first distant metastasis for node-negative and node-positive patients. Analysis by p53 status showed no significant effect on visceral metastases. In contrast, vimentin-positive primaries metastasised twice (and in node-negative patients, 3.5 times) as often to lung, liver and brain as did the vimentin-negative primaries. Both p53-positive and vimentin-positive tumours showed a significantly lower tendency to metastasise to the bone than did their negative counterparts.
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PMID:p53 protein and vimentin in invasive ductal NOS breast carcinoma--relationship with survival and sites of metastases. 783 13


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