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)

High affinity somatostatin receptors (SS-R) have been identified in membrane homogenates or tissue sections from several hundred human tumors. SS-R were found in most tumors originating from SS target tissues, i.e. GH- and TSH-producing pituitary tumors, endocrine gastroenteropancreatic (GEP) tumors (including metastases) and brain tumors, including gliomas and neuroblastomas. SS-R were also expressed in several tumors originating from various other tissues, i.e. breast and small cell lung carcinomas, some colorectal cancers, and medullary thyroid carcinomas. In general, most of the SS-R+ tumors are well-differentiated and/or have neuroendocrine features. They often have low or absent epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) expression. In some tumors (i.e. breast tumors) SS-R are not homogeneously distributed, making SS-R autoradiography a particularly useful tool for assessing SS-R status. SS-R are functional in pituitary and GEP tumors where they mediate hormone secretion inhibition. In these and in the other SS-R+ tumors, SS-R may also mediate antiproliferative effects of SS, as evidenced in animals where growth of SS-R+ tumor xenografts is inhibited by SS analogs. For diagnosis, SS-R+ tumors and metastases can be localized in vivo by scanning techniques after 123I-labelled SS analog injection.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1990 Dec 20
PMID:Somatostatin receptors in malignant tissues. 198 Oct 10

In order to test the hypothesis of complete androgen blockade for advanced prostate cancer (D2CaP), an intergroup trial was instituted in 1985 comparing leuprolide (L) alone to the combination of L with flutamide (F). Eligibility requirements included previously untreated histologically confirmed stage D2CaP, measurable bone or soft tissue metastases, performance status (PS) of 3 or better, acceptable renal and hepatic function, no severe cardiac disease, and no prior or concomitant endocrine therapy. Stratification at entry was on the basis of PS and none or minimal disease (MD) versus severe degree (SD) of bone metastases. Six hundred and seventeen patients were entered into this study between March 1985 and April 1986. At the present time, there is a 3-month difference in the median progression-free survival (13.9 vs 16.9 months; P = 0.039) and a 7.1-month difference in survival (27.9 vs 35.01 months; P = 0.035) favoring L + F. In L + F-treated patients with good PS-MD, the median survival recently has been reached and is 51.9 months vs 39.6 months for L + P patients. The 107 black patients in the study had median survival of 26.4 months vs 33.3 months for whites. Discussions of racial differences in survival as well as other prognostic factors will be presented. The combination of L + F is superior to treatment with L alone. The benefits appear greatest in patients with minimal disease.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1990 Dec 20
PMID:Treatment of newly diagnosed state D2 prostate cancer with leuprolide and flutamide or leuprolide alone, phase III, intergroup study 0036. 212 38

Metastasis is a complex non-stochastic process that is most likely the result of genetic and epigenetic interactions of a wide variety of genes. The search for a single gene which can encompass such a pleiotropic response as to account for the observed phenotypic characteristics of metastatic tumour populations has been unsuccessful. Particular studies involving gene transfection, subtractive hybridisation and cell fusion are beginning to identify specific genes which contribute to metastasis in some cell types. However, such analyses are complicated by the inherent genetic instability and phenotypic heterogeneity present in tumour populations. A more detailed understanding of the metastatic process may require an abandoning of current generalised approaches to metastasis in favour of concentrating on key components of the metastatic cascade such as adhesion and invasion.
Mol Aspects Med 1990
PMID:Molecular oncogenetics of metastasis. 213 50

Recombinant interferon alpha-C is a new strain of the alpha interferon family. It was given to 33 patients with measurable metastatic renal cell carcinoma of whom 31 were evaluable. Protocol consisted of 3 million U/d for 2 weeks, then 3 million U/m2 every other day until progression. No complete response was observed. Three patients (9.7%) had partial response for a mean duration of 5.6 months and eight patients (25.8%) were stabilized for a mean of 4.3 months. Responsive sites were mainly lung, bone, and kidney, while side effects were generally mild. better results were observed in previously nephrectomized patients who had not received chemotherapy or hormonotherapy for recurrent or metastatic disease (p less than 0.05), and also in patients with a brief disease-free interval and short delay from presenting symptoms of the primary tumor until interferon treatment (p less than 0.05). Median survival was significantly longer in responders than in progressors (p less than 0.05). We suggest that the efficacy of recombinant interferon alpha-C in a low-dose regime versus other types of interferon as first-line therapy for inoperable, metastatic, or locally recurrent renal cell carcinoma should be investigated in a prospective, controlled, randomized study.
Mol Biother 1990 Sep
PMID:Phase II study of recombinant interferon alpha-C in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 222 99

Endocrine therapy is a major treatment modality for the systemic management of breast cancer. In comparison with alternatives such as chemotherapy, hormone manipulations have the advantage of lower toxicity but suffer from the disadvantages of producing responses in only 30-40% of patients with metastatic disease and seldom being curative. Nevertheless in recent years there have been significant advances in the endocrine treatment of breast cancer which have stemmed from a better understanding of the sources from which breast tumours may be supplied with hormones, the mechanism by which hormones regulate tumour proliferation and the more accurate identification of hormone sensitive tumours. As a result agents such as antioestrogens, aromatase inhibitors. LHRH agonists have largely superseded surgical and radiological ablation of endocrine organs. The major reduction in morbidity associated with these medical regimes means that they are much more acceptable to patients and may be used as adjuvants to local treatment of the breast in patients with "earlier" stages of the disease. At the same time patients can now be offered rational treatment selected on the basis of tumour biology rather than on more empirical criteria. The aims of this review are to provide details of the research which has led to this progress in endocrine treatment of breast cancer and to put into perspective the prospects for further advances.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1990 Nov 30
PMID:Endocrine treatment for breast cancers: biological rationale and current progress. 227 30

Aromatase activity has been measured in human breast cancers by incubating tumour minces with [7 alpha-3H]testosterone and characterizing purified oestradiol (E2) fractions by chemical derivative formation. Of 247 primary tumours, 178 showed evidence of oestrogen biosynthesis, levels varying between 0.5 and 12.5 fmol E2 produced/h/g tissue. These values were quantitatively small but at least comparable with those in other peripheral tissues. There was no correlation between presence or level of aromatase activity and the histopathology of the tumours although oestrogen biosynthesis was more likely to be present in more cellular tumours. Aromatase activity was also unrelated to age, menopausal status, lymph node status and T stage of the patient from which the tumour was derived. In a subgroup of patients presenting without clinical evidence of distant metastatic disease, no significant relation was detected between tumour aromatase and disease-free interval, but tumours without aromatase activity were associated with increased survival at 36 months after primary treatment. A statistically significant correlation was also detected between the presence of tumour aromatase and oestrogen receptors. Furthermore, in small subgroups of patients with "advanced" breast cancer tumour aromatase was related to response to aminoglutethimide but not tamoxifen therapy. Whilst these results do not conclusively define a role for local synthesis of oestrogen in the progression of breast cancer, this possibility still exists and further studies on tumour aromatase are warranted.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1990 Dec 20
PMID:Relationship between tumour aromatase activity, tumour characteristics and response to therapy. 228 81

It has been ascertained that one of several possible reasons for negligible interferon activity in solid tumors, namely, hepatic metastases induced in rats after intraportal injection of Walker carcinoma 256 cells, is the significantly lower levels of interferon in the interstitial fluid of metastases in comparison to normal liver and plasma.
Mol Biother 1990 Dec
PMID:Distribution of human recombinant interferon-alpha 2 in rat plasma, liver, and experimental liver metastases. 228 23

Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells combined with recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) can produce tumor regression in murine models and in patients with pulmonary metastatic disease. However, the dose escalations of rIL-2 required for optimal therapeutic effect often result in increased vascular permeability ("vascular leak syndrome") and other toxic systemic consequences. To avoid systemic distribution, lung perfusion was used to administer LAK and rIL-2 locally. Preliminary to using these agents to treat tumor-bearing lungs, we used a nonblood-perfused isolated rat lung model to study the localization of radiolabeled rIL-2 and LAK and to characterize effects on normal lung tissue of increasing dosages and exposure times of rIL-2 and LAK cells, individually and combined. Lung function or permeability was assessed by measuring lung weight gain and pulmonary arterial pressure during the perfusion, extravascular lung water by double indicator dilution techniques, and wet weight to dry weight ratio. After perfusion for 1 hour using 200,000 U (1,300 U/ml) rIL-2, injury was detected as visible pulmonary edema, weight gain and increases in wet to dry weight ratio, and extravascular lung water; no injury was detected at lower, clinically appropriate dosages. When 1 X 10(8) LAK cells combined with 100,000 U rIL-2 (666 U/ml) were perfused for up to 2 hours, no injury was ascertained. Uptake and distribution of the radiolabeled rIL-2 or LAK was uniform to all lung lobes and corresponded to the decrease of 12% of the rIL-2 or 50% of the LAK from the perfusate after 1-hour perfusion.
Mol Biother 1990 Mar
PMID:Lymphokine-activated killer cells with interleukin-2: dose toxicity and localization in isolated perfused rat lungs. 233 37

Hepatocellular carcinoma cells obtained from ascitic fluid after diethylnitrosamine treatment of Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pigs produce solid (primary) tumors, lymph-node metastases and malignant ascites when reinjected into animals of the same strain. When brought into culture the cells settle, form multilayer cultures and can be maintained in passage. In addition to epithelium-specific cytokeratin intermediate filaments (IF), these latter cells, like most cultured cells, also contain vimentin. Hepatocellular carcinoma cells in solid tumors and in metastatic tumors retain their original keratin IF and in general do not have an additional vimentin-IF system. When the tumor cells are present in ascites they develop vimentin-IF in addition to cytokeratin filaments. Vimentin is gradually lost when these cells sediment onto the peritoneal surface and proliferate continuously to form papillary projections, or when they are detected as circumscribed metastases. It seems likely, therefore, that in this system the synthesis of an additional vimentin cytoskeleton is related to reduced cell-to-cell contact and to the ability of the cells to survive individually or as cell clusters in body fluids, without being part of a cohesive tissue.
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1986
PMID:Changing intermediate-sized filament patterns in metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma cells of the guinea pig. 242 67

Hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Line-10), obtained from ascitic fluid after diethylnitrosamine treatment of Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pigs, produce solid (primary) tumours, lymph-node and lung metastases and malignant ascites when reinjected into animals of the same strain. Monoclonal antibodies were raised against the tumour cells by immunizing BALB/c mice with viable ascitic hepatocellular Line-10 tumour cells. Three hybridomas producing anti-Line-10 monoclonal antibodies were selected for further studies (10TL1, 10TL40 and 10TL43) and compared with monoclonal antibodies against intermediate filament keratins. The anti-Line-10 monoclonal antibodies did not cross react with Line-1 hepatocellular carcinoma cells, nor with normal guinea pig hepatocytes. When ascitic Line-10 cells form high papillary projections on the peritoneal surface, they significantly reduced their antigen expression of 10TL40 and of 10TL43 defined antigens, while the expression of 10TL1 defined antigens remained unaltered. Invading Line-10 cells in the deep submesothelial stromal tissue, however, lost reactivity with MoAb 10TL43 but not with the MoAb's 10TL40 and 10TL1. The antigens on lung- and lymphnode metastases remained largely unaffected. The reactivity with MoAb's 10TL40 and with 10TL43 was also lost upon prolonged culturing of Line-10 cells. The reactivity of Line-10 and Line-1 cells with all monoclonal antibodies against keratin filaments remained unaltered. Line-1 cells could be distinguished from Line-10 cells by the absence of any reactivity with the MoAb's 10TL1, -40, -43, but also by the fact that 100% of the Line-1 cells were positive with antibodies against keratins 5/8, 18, and 7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl Mol Pathol 1989
PMID:Changing tumour antigen expression in metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma cells of the guinea pig. 246 49


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