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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among the various factors reported as having significant prognostic value in primary breast cancers, the author discusses the value of well established "classical" prognostic factors used routinely and "new" prognostic factors developed over recent years as a result of progress in cell and molecular biology. The presence of axillary lymph node metastases remains the most important prognostic factor of recurrence, justifying post-surgical adjuvant therapy. However, in patients with negative axillary nodes (N-), the size of the tumour, Scarff-Bloom-Richardson (SBR and MSBR) histological grade, certain particular histological types (carcinoma in situ and tubular, colloid or pure papillary cancer) and hormone receptors (ER and PR) appear to be well established prognostic factors allowing the identification, within this group of N- patients who generally have a good prognosis, those patients with a low risk of recurrence and therefore not requiring adjuvant therapy. In contrast, the proliferative activity (ploidy and S phase, Thymidine Labeling Index, antibody Ki67), cathepsin D, thymidine kinase, EGF receptors, several genes including oncogene HER-2/neu, are recently developed prognostic factors whose significance needs to be confirmed by further studies.
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PMID:[Prognostic factors in breast cancer]. 134 Jan 64

The increased expression of proteolytic systems is one of the characteristics of transformed and malignant cells and their evaluations in whole tumor homogenates were considered as possible diagnostic and/or prognostic factors. Abnormal intracellular distribution, increased activities and secretion of cysteine proteinases (CPs) cathepsin B (Cat B) and L (Cat L), were associated with tumor progression. In the present study of matched pairs of breast carcinoma and normal breast tissue, the activities of Cat B and Cat L in breast carcinoma homogenates were found to be 20 and 50 fold higher, respectively, than in normal tissues. In contrast, a decrease in total inhibitory activity of cysteine proteinase inhibitors (CPIs) was observed but an average ratio between tumor and normal tissues was only 0.75. One of the CPIs, stefin A, was also determined immunochemically. The activities of CPs and CPIs were compared to the increased levels of cathepsin D (Cat D) activities in individual patients, but no statistically significant correlations were found. We correlated CPs and CPIs with morphological and receptor data as well as the axillary lymph node metastases. There was no statistical correlation of CP and CPIs with the number of lymph node metastases. However, highly elevated levels of Cat B and Cat L and lowered CPI activities in tumor cytosols were often associated with poorly differentiated carcinomas and those with negative ER and PR values. We conclude that cysteine-dependent proteolysis may play an important role in breast tumors.
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PMID:Cystatins and cathepsins in breast carcinoma. 151 89

To determine overexpression of cathepsin D in head and neck tumours we examined cytosols from 53 primary tumours, nine cytosols of lymph node metastases and 12 cytosols from adjacent normal tissue. We found a significantly lower concentration in normal tissue compared with tumour cytosol as well as with metastases, even when we compared tumours and corresponding metastases pairwise. In addition, we found a significantly higher concentration of cathepsin D in five lymph node metastases than in the corresponding tumours. We conclude that the reported role of cathepsin D is not restricted to breast cancer but could also be important in head and neck cancer.
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PMID:Expression of cathepsin D in head and neck cancer. 151 61

The production of metastasis appears to involve a number of different proteases including the urokinase form of plasminogen activator, cathepsin B, cathepsin D and various metalloproteases. Early data implicating these proteases in metastasis were mostly indirect and based on correlation studies in animal models. More recent work, using specific protease inhibitors and antibodies against proteases to block experimental metastasis, have provided more direct evidence that proteases play a role in cancer spread. In addition, transfection of genes encoding certain proteases increases the metastatic phenotype of the recipient cells. In human tumours, a number of different proteases also correlate with metastatic potential. It is concluded that certain proteases may be new prognostic markers in cancer as well as new targets for anti-metastatic therapy.
Clin Exp Metastasis 1992 May
PMID:The role of proteolytic enzymes in cancer invasion and metastasis. 158 84

The concentration of total cathepsin D, which is regarded as an additional prognostic factor, was measured in 87 patients with primary breast cancer by a radioimmunoassay in tumour cytosol. The distribution of values was approximately log normal with a median value of 49 pmol/mg protein. Relating the level of cathepsin D to other prognostic factors, no significant association to the patients' age, menopausal status, tumour size, axillary lymph node involvement, distant metastases, type of tumour, histological grading or hormone receptor status could be established. Therefore, cathepsin D seems to be independent from other established prognostic criteria, which is a prerequisite for this protease to be useful as an additional prognostic marker.
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PMID:[Cathepsin D in primary breast cancer in correlation with various prognostic factors]. 165 Mar 23

Using a sandwich enzyme-linked immunoassay, plasma total cathepsin D concentration was assayed in 40 breast cancer patients and 84 patients with various liver diseases and compared to that of 52 normal subjects. There were no significant variations found in breast cancer patients related to tumor size, node invasiveness or metastases. In normal women, cathepsin D levels were slightly but not significantly increased in the luteal phase and in pregnancy. By contrast, plasma cathepsin D concentration was significantly increased in 70-75% of patients with liver disease (cirrhosis, hepatocarcinoma, hepatitis), but not in those with liver steatosis. Cathepsin D was independent of most of the plasma hepatic function tests and was correlated with alpha-fetoprotein in cirrhosis and with alpha-fucosidase in primary hepatocellular carcinoma. We conclude that plasma cathepsin D is not a useful marker in breast cancer. However, since the cellular level of this protease is associated with risk of metastasis in breast cancer, clinical follow-up will be required to test whether high cathepsin D plasma concentration has any prognostic value in liver cirrhosis and primary hepatocarcinoma.
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PMID:Increased plasma cathepsin D concentration in hepatic carcinoma and cirrhosis but not in breast cancer. 166 31

Features of 111 mammary carcinomas derived from breast cancer screening were compared with those of 69 carcinomas presenting 'clinically'. Screen detected cancers were smaller, had less likelihood of nodal metastases, included a higher proportion of in situ tumours and if invasive, tended to be of lower grade. Using immunohistochemical methods, the expression of c-erbB-2 oncoprotein, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and cathepsin D were compared in the two groups. A similar proportion of screened and unscreened tumours expressed c-erbB-2 oncoprotein and EGFR but expression of the oestrogen regulated protein cathepsin D was significantly more frequent in the screened group (P less than 0.05). Although a relatively small series, the results suggest a biological difference between 'screened' and 'clinical' tumours.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical and other features of breast carcinomas presenting clinically compared with those detected by cancer screening. 168 Mar 69

Cathepsin D is an acidic lysosomal protease present in all cells. In estrogen receptor positive and negative breast cancer cell lines, the mRNA coding for pro-cathepsin D is overexpressed and sorting and maturation of the pro-enzyme are altered, via possibly saturation of the Man-6-P/IGF-II receptor, leading to accumulation of the active proteinase in large endosomes and to secretion of the precursor (52K protein). In MCF7 cells, the cathepsin D mRNA is induced directly and transcriptionally by estrogens and indirectly by growth factors. In patients, there is a significant correlation between high cathepsin D concentrations in the cytosol of primary breast cancer and development of metastasis. This marker is independent of other prognostic factors and appears to be particularly useful in axillary node-negative tumors. Transfection of a human cDNA cathepsin D expression vector under the control of SV40 promoter increases the metastatic potential of 3YA1-Ad12 rat tumorigenic cells when intravenously injected into nude mice. The mechanism of cathepsin D-induced metastasis is currently unknown. These results indicate that overexpression of cathepsin D might facilitate breast cancer metastasis, suggesting new possible therapeutic approaches.
Cancer Metastasis Rev 1990 Dec
PMID:Cathepsin D: a protease involved in breast cancer metastasis. 196 95

The capacity of solid tumours to invade the surrounding tissue and to metastasize, is correlated with the formation and degradation of structural elements in the vicinity of the tumour cells. Substances with both procoagulant activity and fibrinolytic activity are important factors in the formation or degradation of a "fibrin-fibronectin-gel matrix". This gel is subsequently transformed into the extracellular matrix, which, together with cells, will form the tumour stroma. When analyzing tumour stroma degradation products, it is obvious that the protease plasmin catalyses the disintegration of fibrin and fibronectin. Additional compounds of the tumour stroma and of the basal membrane are also, at least in part, broken down by plasmin or other proteases, such as collagenase IV and cathepsin D. The plasminogen activator urokinase (uPA) seems to play a central role as it was shown that elevated content of uPA is correlated with a high risk of early relapse and shorter overall survival, at least in breast cancer. It has been shown, that by means of quantifying uPA, patients with a relative high or low risk can even be selected within the classical risk groups, which so far are defined by the locoregional extension of the tumour and the hormone receptor status only. Evidently, as uPA content in human breast cancer tissue is an independent prognostic factor, one may speculate, that those experimental or in vitro data, which correlated increase in uPA-synthesis with malignancy, may be of direct relevance for human tumour biology. Moreover, due to these recent observations on the prognostic significance of tumour-associated proteases, new aspects for the selection of risk collectives within the node-negative breast cancer patients for adjuvant therapy have to be considered. It may well be possible, that one may affect tumour invasion and metastasis by inhibiting protease action of solid tumours by disturbing the binding of proteases to tumour cell surface receptors. As it is only a quantitative aspect, which separates benign physiological processes from tumour cell pathophysiology, experimental evidence suggests, that less drastic forms of palliative therapy can be proposed.
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PMID:[Clinical and prognostic significance of tumor-associated proteases in gynecologic oncology]. 204 Apr 18

Prognostic variables in breast cancer are urgently needed to individualize adjuvant cytotoxic therapy, especially in those patients where metastases in the lymph nodes have not been detected (node-negative disease). So far histomorphological criteria, the determination of receptors for steroid hormones or EGF (epidermal growth factor), the protease cathepsin D or DNA-ploidy are used to distinguish between low- and high-risk patients. High-risk patients have a higher incidence of recurrences and/or shorter overall survival after surgery of the primary tumour than low-risk patients. High-risk patients (node-positive; hormone-receptor-negative) would receive adjuvant hormone therapy or chemotherapy. In the node-negative patient, adjuvant therapy is only recommended if a high content of cathepsin D and aneuploidy of the tumour (or high S-phase in diploid tumours) has been diagnosed. Determination of cathepsin D in tumour extracts as a variable in breast cancer patients is based on the fact that invasion and metastasis is correlated with elevated levels of tumour-associated proteases such as cathepsins B and D, collagenase IV and plasminogen activators. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) which is secreted by tumour cells as an enzymatically inactive proenzyme (pro-uPA) seems to play a key role in mediating tumour cell invasion in cancer tissues. Receptor-bound uPA converts enzymatically inactive plasminogen into the serine protease plasmin which then degrades the extracellular matrix surrounding the tumour cells (tumour stroma). We localized pro-uPA/uPA immunohistochemically in paraffin-embedded formalin-fixed breast cancer tissue sections. Pro-uPA/uPA was detected in the cytoplasm and on the plasma membrane of the tumour cells reflecting receptor-bound pro-uPA/uPA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumour-associated fibrinolysis: the prognostic relevance of plasminogen activators uPA and tPA in human breast cancer. 213 50


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