Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027651 (
tumor
)
685,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prospective pathologic staging by pelvic lymphadenectomy in 60 patients with clinically localized carcinoma of the prostate disclosed a high incidence (35 per cent) of clinically silent and unsuspected lymph node metastases. When present, metastatic disease was frequently bilateral (57 per cent) and most commonly involved the obturator-hypogastric lymph nodes (87 per cent). Micrometastases alone were found in 5 patients and the potential significance of this finding on survival is discussed. Although the presence or absence of metastases could not be accurately predicted by histologic analysis of biopsy or prostatectomy specimens, the finding of undifferentiated
tumor
, marked anaplasia and penetration through the capsule correlated positively with
nodal
metastases. Pelvic lymphadenectomy is a safe and important diagnostic tool in the accurate staging of these patients. Its widespread use is advocated in patients with clinical stage B1, B2 and C tumors prior to definitive therapy. Based on the prospective data generated in this study lymphatic metastasis appears to be an early event in the spread of prostatic cancer.
...
PMID:Prostatic carcinoma: incidence and location of unsuspected lymphatic metastases. 124 19
The lymphocytes and serum of a nonidentical twin male with advanced colon cancer were evaluated in vitro for their ability to inhibit the growth of autologous
tumor
cells. The patient's serum enhanced autologous
tumor
cell growth. Three siblings including an HL-A matched grade A female twin underwent similar studies. Benign lymph nodes of the twins and one sibling were evaluated for the ability of
nodal
macrophages to be sensitized to the patient's
tumor
antigen. The male twin patient received intralymphatically in vitro sensitized
nodal
macrophages and lymphocytes from the female twin donor. Thirty days after treatment the patient's lymphocytes and serum inhibited the growth of autologous
tumor
cells.
...
PMID:Adoptive transfer of tumor immunity between twins by in vitro immunized nodal macrophages and lymphocytes: reversal of serum enhancement. 124 41
We evaluated the potential of the B16 melanoma of mice as a model system for BCG immunotherapy of malignant melanoma. We studied a variety of treatment protocols: a) BCG given simultaneously but separately with a small number of B16 cells significantly inhibited tumor growth in only three of eight experiments. b) BCG injected directly into the
tumor
stimulated tumor growth in three of three experiments; the stimulation was at least partially attributable to the nutrient medium in which the BCG was suspended. c) The B16
tumor
was weakly immunogenic and the addition of BCG to a
tumor
cell vaccine offered little improvement in subsequent resistance to
tumor
cell challenge: d) In a model of postsurgical residual tumor, metastatic to regional lymph nodes, BCG and
tumor
cell vaccination did not alter the development of
nodal
metastases. The B16 melanoma was not a useful model system for BCG immunotherapy, because the
tumor
inhibition was feeble, inconsistent, and not associated with augmented
tumor
immunity.
...
PMID:Inconsistent response of B16 melanoma to BCG immunotherapy. 125 99
One hundred fifty-eight patients with axillary
nodal
metastases recovered from radical mastectomy specimens for operable, invasive breast cancer were divided into those in whom such metastases were confined within the node and those in whom one or more nodes manifested extranodal extension. The relationships of these patterns to 33 pathologic and seven clinical features of these cases were investigated by contingency table analysis. Statistically significant associations (p less than .05) between extranodal extension of such metastases and short-term treatment failure, as well as the presence of four or more involved nodes, infiltrating ductal NOS histologic
tumor
type, stellate
tumor
border, and nipple involvement, were found. When the metastases were confined to the node there was a significantly greater likelihood that the cancers were either medullary or tubular histologic types. Associations with severe cell reaction and a nuclear grade of 1 were also found, but appeared to reflect the high frequency of medullary carcinomas in this group. The results suggest that evaluation of extranodal extension of axillary
nodal
metastases in patients with breast cancer may represent an important prognostic discriminant.
...
PMID:Pathologic findings from the national surgical adjuvant breast project. (Protocol no. 4). III. The significance of extranodal extension of axillary metastases. 126 7
Thirty-eight cases of carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater are presented. The diagnosis has been confirmed at laparatomy in all patients. Three operations were done, a pancreaticoduodenal resection in 23 patients, a biliary-enteric bypass in 7 patients and a biliary-enteric bypass plus excision of
tumor
in 8 patients. The operative mortality was 8% following resection, 14% following bypass plus excision of the ampulla and 13% following biliary-enteric bypass. Five patients survived 5 or more years. The longest survivors have followed pancreaticoduodenal resections (131 and 216 months). The level of bilirubin or presence of pain did not correlate with prognosis. Prognosis was better in the absence of
nodal
metastases, and in the presence of papillary tumors.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater: Review of 38 cases with emphasis on treatment and prognostic factors. 126 90
From 1958 through 1969, inclusive, 418 patients with melanoma of the trunk were treated at the M. D. Anderson Hospital and
Tumor
Institute. Of these, 128 patients (31%) had Stage I disease and were treated by excision with observation of regional nodes in all except five patients. Retrospectively these Stage I patients were analyzed regarding (1) survival, (2) sites and timing of treatment failures, (3) the relation of the primary site to eventual
nodal
metastasis, and (4) the variables of sex, size, and location on the trunk, which also were correlated with disease control. The results show: (1) actuarial survival rate of 65.7% and 55.7% at 5 and 10 years, respectively; (2) positive regional lymph nodes (RLN) evolved in 34 patients (28%), systemic metastases in 18 patients (15%), local recurrence (LR) in four patients, LR plus RLN in one patient, and intransit metastases in three patients as the first evidence of failure. Over 90% of LR and positive RLN developed within 24 months. Many intransit recurrences and systemic metastases occurred later and account for much of the biologic variability attributed to melanomas: (3) the anatomy of the lymphatics of the trunk as described by Sappey is an excellent guide to the site of first
nodal
metastasis, (4) a midline or near-midline primary site correlated with regional failure (p less than 0.05). More men failed regionally than did women (p less than 0.05). In retrospective calculation, 184 regional node dissections would have been required for probable salvage of 13 patients (10%) if surgical treatment for subclinical disease had been used routinely.
...
PMID:Melanoma of the trunk: the results of surgical excision and anatomic guidelines for predicting nodal metastasis. 127 63
The accumulation of p53 protein in the nuclei of cancer cells is known to correlate well with the presence of mutations in the p53 gene. We therefore investigated the immunohistochemical reactivity of the anti-p53 antibody, PAb1801, in specimens taken from 149 cases of primary gastric cancer and processed by acetone fixation, in order to elucidate the incidence and clinicopathological significance of p53 alterations in gastric cancer. Thirty-four out of 99 (34%) advanced gastric cancers and 11 out of 50 (22%) early gastric cancers showed positive reactions in the nuclei. The nuclei of non-cancerous cells, including gastric glandular epithelial cells, however, were not stained. Histopathologically, a nuclear accumulation of p53 protein was seen frequently in papillary adenocarcinoma, well- to moderately-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma and poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma with solid nests or focal tubular structures (43/101, 43%), but was rarely seen in signet-ring cell carcinoma, mucinous adenocarcinoma or poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma growing in a scattered manner (2/48, 4%). There was no correlation between stainability of p53 protein and clinicopathological features such as depth of
tumor
invasion, microscopic lymphatic invasion, microscopic venous invasion,
nodal
involvement and clinicopathological stage in papillary adenocarcinoma, well- to moderately-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma and poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma with solid nests or focal tubular structures. The results suggest papillary adenocarcinoma, well- to moderately-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma and poorly-differentiated adenocarcinoma with solid nests or focal tubular structures to share a common carcinogenetic pathway in which mutation of the p53 gene has an important role to play at a relatively early stage. Additionally, we showed the applicability of immunohistochemical detection of p53 protein in endoscopic biopsy material routinely formalin-fixed. The current method may be of some help in routine practice in discriminating between normal, precancerous and cancer cells in the stomach.
...
PMID:High incidence of nuclear accumulation of p53 protein in gastric cancer. 127 44
Estrogen receptor (ER) analysis in breast cancer has been used in three clinical situations: to select patients with advanced breast cancer for hormonal therapy, as a prognostic parameter, and for selection of women with early breast cancer to adjuvant hormonal treatment. ER has traditionally been measured using labelled hormone in binding assays--often in dextran-coated charcoal assays (DCC). Monoclonal antibodies to ER has permitted development of a solid phase enzyme immunoassay (ER-EIA) used for quantitative determination of ER in tissue homogenates, and have also been used for determination of ER using an immunohistochemical assay in frozen sections (ER-ICA) or in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue (ER-PAR). A large number of studies has compared ER-EIA with ER-DCC assays. There is a good linear correlation between the two types of assay but ER-EIA measure more ER and classify a larger fraction of tumors ER-positive than conventional ER assays. Lack of clinical data makes the significance of this uncertain. Numerous studies have reported on the correlation between ER-ICA and ER-DCC or ER-EIA. There is a good correlation among the assays on classification of ER status with a median 86% concordance, but a somewhat poorer correlation between semiquantified ER of immunohistochemical assays and ER determined by the quantitative methods (median coefficient of correlation 0.67). There is a large variation in the cut-off level for definition of ER-positive in immunohistochemical assays emphasizing the need for quality control studies. The major problem involved in ER analysis in paraffin-embedded tissue is a considerable loss of immunoreactivity compared to sections from frozen tissue. This can partly be overcome by modifications of the immunohistochemical technique using enzyme pretreatment and other amplification systems, but the sensitivity of ER-PAR remains lower than ER-ICA despite these modifications, and the ER status is less reliably determined in tumors with low ER contents (< 100 fmol). The prognostic value of ER-PAR was evaluated with a multivariate analysis. The endpoint was disease-free interval in systemically untreated patients with early breast cancer, and the variables used were: ER-DCC, ER-PAR, age,
tumor
size,
tumor
grade, and
nodal
status. A total of 133 patients from the Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group's (DBCG) 77c protocols had a complete set of variables. The analysis showed that only
nodal
status, ER-DCC, and
tumor
grade were significant and independent prognostic variables. An overview of larger multivariate studies on mainly node-negative patients failed to show independent prognostic significance of ER-DCC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Determination of estrogen receptors in paraffin-embedded tissue. Techniques and the value in breast cancer treatment. 128 48
72 T-cell lymphomas were analyzed for the presence of Epstein-Barr virus DNA using Southern or dot blot hybridization. EBV DNA was found in 25 peripheral T-cell lymphomas and in none of 6 T-lymphoblastic tumors. A high prevalence of EBV was detected in AILD type, Lennert's, pleomorphic medium and large cell
nodal
lymphomas and in upper aerodigestive tract lymphoma biopsies. Clonotypic analysis revealed monoclonal as well as oligoclonal viral populations. The possible influence of EBV in lymphomagenesis, the impact of virus-mediated interactions in the B- and T-cell system and factors involving site of
tumor
development are discussed.
...
PMID:[Detection of Epstein-Barr virus genomes in various entities of low and high grade T-cell lymphomas]. 128 58
739 regional lymph nodes from 94 patients with stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) were studied by immunohistochemistry. These lymph nodes, contained no metastasis as assessed by conventional histopathology, were recut. A series consecutive sections from the original blocks were immunostained with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to keratins, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and human milk fat globulin membrane antigen (HMFG-2). Single tumor cells or small clusters of
tumor
cells, not visible on routine examination, were readily detected. The actual number of lymph nodes that contained occult
tumor
cells was 123 (16.6%) from 53 patients (56.4%). The majority of 102 immunostaining positive nodes were distributed in the hilar (29%) and peribronchial (25%) regions. Our data indicate that: 1. a series consecutive sections and immunohistochemistry may greatly increase the diagnostic yield of occult micrometastases in lymph nodes. 2. the high incidence of occult metastases in NSCLC may be of importance in relation to their rapid dissemination and high death rate. 3. the high frequency of occult
nodal
metastases in NSCLC raises questions in regard to our presently used criteria for staging, prognosis and treatment of ostensibly stage I disease. 4. perhaps resections of hilar and peribronchial lymph nodes will have an important clinical significance in prevention of wide dissemination of
tumor
cells.
...
PMID:[An immunohistochemical study of occult micrometastases in regional lymph nodes of patients with stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma]. 128 90
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>