Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glycopeptides suggesting a complex oligosaccharide composition are present on the surface of cells from human neuroblastoma tumors and several cell lines derived from the tumors. The glycopeptides, labeled with radioactive L-fucose, were removed from the cell surface with trypsin, digested with Pronase, and examined by chromatography on Sephadex G-50. Human skin fibroblasts, brain cells, and a fibroblast line derived from neuroblastoma tumor tissue show less complex glycopeptides. Although some differences exist between the cell lines and the primary tumor cells, the similarities between these human tumors and animal tumors examined previously are striking.
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PMID:Glycopeptides from the surgace of human neuroblastoma cells. 100 Apr 97

A "dumbbell" neuroblastoma is a malignant neoplasm usually primary in the mediastinum or retroperitoneum with posterior extension through an intervertebral foramen to additional tumor within the spinal canal. Neurologic deficits are found in almost all cases. Nineteen patients with such tumors were reviewed with respect to diagnosis, management, and results. Treatment consisted of prompt laminectomy with total or subtotal excision of the extradural tumor. The primary tumor in the mediastinum or retroperitoneal area was removed at a second stage. All patients received postoperative radiation therapy. Eleven of the 17 patients observed more than two years are free of disease, a cure rate much higher than the overall experience with neuroblastoma. Substantial recovery of neurologic function occurred in most, but kyphoscoliotic deformities were a disturbingly frequent late complication.
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PMID:Dumbbell neuroblastomas in children. 117 73

Nine patients, whose ages ranged from 18 to 72, had small round cell neoplasms which were found on electron microscopy to have the ultrastructural features of neuroblastoma. The primary tumor was retroperitoneal in one patient. In another, liver and bone metastases were present and the primary site was not determined. The tumor presented in a peripheral location in the remaining seven patients (leg in two, buttock in one, head and neck in four), and all seven tumors metastasized to regional lymph nodes. One tumor that arose in the nasal cavity displayed olfactory differentiation. Two tumors recurred locally following excision. Although two patients have died from disseminated disease, the prognosis nevertheless appears more favorable than in childhood neuroblastoma. Adequate local excision of a peripheral lesion with close follow-up are indicated.
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PMID:Adult neuroblastoma. Electron microscopic observations in nine cases. 126 Jun 55

Stage IV-S neuroblastoma, characterized by a primary tumor plus disseminated tumors in liver, skin and bone marrow, has a favorable clinical prognosis when compared to metastatic Stage IV neuroblastoma. This favorable outcome also characterized mice receiving tumor transplants to these "IV-S" sites. We report the testing of the hypothesis that enhanced anti-tumor immunity in "IV-S" site neuroblastoma recipients explains this improved survival. A million murine C1300 neuroblastoma cells were inoculated into 256 A/J mice to either "IV-S" sites of skin, liver, peritoneal cavity, or to the disseminated stage "IV" sites of subcutaneous tissue, muscle, kidney and lung. After 21 and 28 days of tumor growth, spleen cells from tumor bearing mice were harvested and analyzed by a 51 Cr release lymphocytotoxicity assay. Cytotoxic T cell activity was consistently higher at day 28 than day 21. In the liver and in the peritoneal cavity, cytotoxic T cell activity was higher than in other organs, and at day 28 these values were significantly higher than Stage "IV" sites. On the other hand, skin is not a immunologically privileged site in vivo study.
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PMID:Influence of primary tumor site on host anti-tumor immunity. 129 50

In Japan, aiming at early and preclinical detection of neuroblastoma in infancy a mass screening program for the tumor has been implemented nationwide using urinary tests for catecholamine metabolites, vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and homovanillic acid (HVA) (Sawada 1990; Sawada et al. 1991). In this report, the results obtained from the screening program in Miyagi Prefecture for the last 6 years are described. The detection rate of neuroblastoma by mass screening was 1:8,377 among 125,652 infants tested in Miyagi Prefecture. All but one patients survived after removal of the primary tumor and none or minimal chemotherapy.
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PMID:Mass screening for neuroblastoma in Miyagi Prefecture. 130 97

Neuroblastoma is the most common solid tumor of children less than 5 years of age; yet the biology of this tumor is poorly understood. Neuroblastoma tumors are derived from neural crest precursors; they synthesize both adrenergic and peptidergic neurotransmitters. This study determined VIP receptor expression in primary neuroblastoma tumors prior to chemotherapy. The VIP receptor was expressed in 12 of 15 neuroblastoma tumors as determined by direct binding studies (KD = 1.3-12.4 nM) and VIP-mediated stimulation of adenylate cyclase. The VIP stimulation index for adenylate cyclase in the primary tumor was inversely correlated with the VIP content of the tumor, suggesting that VIP regulates its own receptor expression. Similar observations were made in vitro by comparison of two human neuroblastoma cell lines, IMR32 and SKNSH. Both cell lines were demonstrated to express specific, high affinity VIP receptors (KD = 4 nM and 2.5 nM for IMR32 and SKNSH, respectively). IMR32 cells contained very low levels of VIP (0.6 pg VIP/10(6) cells). Exogenous VIP stimulated adenylate cyclase 22-fold over basal activity and VIP inhibited proliferation of IMR32 cells by 49% in 6-day cultures. On the other hand, SKNSH cells synthesized high levels of VIP (6.3 pg/10(6) cells), metabolized VIP rapidly and demonstrated a low level of VIP-mediated stimulation of adenylate cyclase; their proliferation rate was minimally inhibited by exogenous VIP. These observations help validate the hypothesis that VIP serves as an autocrine growth factor in neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Vasoactive intestinal peptide: autocrine growth factor in neuroblastoma. 131 95

Deletion of the short arm of chromosome 1 is among the most recurrent cytogenetic alterations found in neuroblastoma and has been associated with short survival. However, this prognostic information, which relies on time-consuming techniques, is not yet routinely exploited. In order to set up a reliable and simple routine test to determine 1p deletion in neuroblastoma, we have used the polymerase chain reaction to genotype neuroblastoma DNA at 2 loci containing a variable number of tandem repeats and located on the distal part of the short arm of chromosome 1. Agarose gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining of the amplification products enable a simple determination of constitutional and tumor genotypes at these loci to be made. A total of 37 samples from 29 patients were studied with this technique. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) could be identified in 8 cases. In each case the results obtained were in agreement with those achieved by the Southern procedure. This technique will be of particular interest in the pretherapeutic analysis of 1p deletions in small tumor samples obtained by fine-needle aspirates of the primary tumor. It should also enable retrospective studies from paraffin-embedded tumor fragments to be made and provide information for the analysis of tumor heterogeneity in neuroblastoma and in other tumors with 1p deletions.
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PMID:PCR assay for chromosome 1p deletion in small neuroblastoma samples. 139 34

Current recommendations for treatment of children with IV-S neuroblastoma (NB) indicate that "supportive care is the cornerstone of therapy" and resection of the primary tumor is not mandated. The presentation and clinical management of 37 IV-S NB patients from three pediatric oncology centers were retrospectively reviewed. The 22 boys and 15 girls presented at an average age of 107 days (range, 4 to 616 days). Primary tumor sites were identified in the adrenal gland in 19 children, the thorax in 5, the retroperitoneum in 4, and 1 each in the pelvis and kidney. At the time of presentation, metastatic disease was documented in the liver (27), bone marrow (19), skin (7), and regional lymph nodes (7). Massive hepatomegaly (below the umbilicus) was demonstrated in 18 patients. Twenty-eight children (76%) have survived on average 90 months following diagnosis. Eight patients (22%) died; six of disease and two of complications of therapy (mean, 9.6 months). One child was lost to follow-up. Only 3 of the 37 patients (8%) were managed solely by supportive care and all are alive. Extirpation of the primary tumor was accomplished in 24 individuals (65%). Twenty patients underwent excision at diagnosis and four had delayed resection with few postoperative complications and no deaths related to resection. One death resulted from progression of disease in a child who had tumor removal. Chemotherapy as a single treatment or in combination with radiation was used in 10 children with three children surviving (30%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Resection of the primary tumor is appropriate for children with stage IV-S neuroblastoma: an analysis of 37 patients. 140 26

Between 1982 and 1990, 2388 bronchoscopic examinations were carried out in patients with cancer in our hospital. A diagnosis of endobronchial metastasis was established in 30 patients (2.09%), with the following primary tumors in descending order of frequency: breast, large bowel, melanoma, neuroblastoma, leiomyosarcoma and endometrial. Despite the rarity of endobronchial metastases secondary to colon adenocarcinoma, we were able to study 3 cases from our Center. In one case the diagnosis of endobronchial metastasis was simultaneous with that of the primary tumor, and in the other 2 this metastatic complication occurred 16 and 42 months, after the original diagnosis. When this complication occurred, the stage of the disease was advanced in all 3 cases: 2 were Dukes' stage C and one stage D. Although this metastatic location usually implies a very negative prognosis as regards life expectancy, it did not seem to significantly reduce the latter in our patients.
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PMID:Endobronchial metastases in colorectal adenocarcinoma. 146 85

To develop consistency in terminology and pathologic criteria, the authors reviewed the literature and 213 cases of neuroblastic tumors (NT) registered with Pediatric Oncology Group (POG) protocols 8104 and 8441. The patients were given standardized therapy stratified according to POG stage and patient age, and four or more histologic sections of primary tumor resected before therapy were available in each of these 213 cases. All stages were represented. The recommended nomenclature combines conventional terms and criteria with those used by Bove and McAdams and Shimada et al. The main features of the recommended nomenclature are as follows: (1) the terms neuroblastoma (NB) and ganglioneuroblastoma (GNB) are retained instead of stroma-poor NB and stroma-rich NB, recommended by Shimada et al.; (2) undifferentiated NB is considered a subtype separate from poorly differentiated NB; and (3) the term GNB is used only when there is a predominant ganglioneuromatous component admixed with the minor neuroblastomatous component. With the use of these criteria and terms, the Shimada classification was determined in the 213 cases. The results showed that, even after stratification for age, POG stage, and primary site, there is a statistically significant difference in survival rate between favorable histologic and unfavorable histologic prognostic subgroups. The authors recommend that definitive prognostic categorization of an NT according to Shimada classification should be done only when adequate histologic material is available from a primary tumor resected before any other therapy. Categorization done on histologic material from small biopsy specimens, previously treated primary tumors, or metastatic sites should be considered tentative.
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PMID:Recommendations for modification of terminology of neuroblastic tumors and prognostic significance of Shimada classification. A clinicopathologic study of 213 cases from the Pediatric Oncology Group. 154 24


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