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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The development of monoclonal antibodies against differentiation antigens on human haematopoietic cells has led to a new concept in stem cell purification: the positive selection. In terms of autologous PBSC transplantation, the immature stem cells are identified by their expression of a specific antigen, the
CD34
. The CD34 antigen is expressed on early lymphohaematopoietic stem cells and progenitor cells, but not on mature blood cells or on tumour cells of several diseases. CD34+ cells are found in low numbers in bone marrow (<2%) and in even lower numbers in steady state blood (<0.01%) but may increase from 1 to 5% after mobilization using chemotherapy and/or growth factors. Several techniques have been set up to enrich PBSC grafts in CD34+ stem cells. The quality of each system is here analysed in terms of
CD34
purity of the selected cell fraction, the
CD34
cell recovery, the tumour cell depletion efficiency and the functional capacity ex vivo and in vivo of the selected cells. The final CD34+ cell purity of the selected fractions is correlated to the concentration of CD34+ cells before selection. The optimal recoveries and the highest purities were generally obtained when the initial
CD34
content was roughly over 1%. Below this figure, the final purity seems to be less predictable. Besides the better tolerance resulting from the reduction in the number of autologous cells, and consequently the total volume of DMSO reinfused to the patient, the selective enrichment of the
CD34
cell population offers a new approach to tumour purging. The procedure by itself results in elimination of about 99% in the total number of initial cells, thus allowing reduction of the overall tumour cell number in the final autograft. However, its major interest is that, in diseases where tumour cells do not express the CD34 antigen, it is theoretically able to completely eliminate the tumour contamination of the graft. Based on previous data showing that lymphoma, myeloma,
neuroblastoma
and breast cancer cells are not CD34+, pilot clinical trials for the separation and transplantation of CD34+ cells selected from PBSC of patients with these diseases have recently been conducted. The efficacy of
CD34
selection in reducing the tumour load of the PBSC of patients with these diseases has been reported. However, the efficacy of purging may greatly differ between individual patients, and complete eradication of contaminating cells from PBSC grafts was not always reached. There is now evidence that purified CD34+ cells are capable of supporting haematopoietic reconstitution in autologous transplantation. However, until now no study has demonstrated clear evidence that the reduction of tumour cells from PBSC of patients by CD34+ cell selection resulted in a lower relapse rate post-transplant, as compared to unselected PBSC infusion.
...
PMID:Positive selection of autologous peripheral blood stem cells. 1100 Sep 84
Adult
neuroblastoma
(ANB) is a rare and poorly recognized entity among a histologically defined group of small, round-cell tumors arising in the retroperitoneum and abdomen. Eight cases of ANB were compared with seven cases of primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PNET) in these locations to identify clinicopathologic features that could be used to distinguish between the two lesions. The ANB study group included four men and four women 22-74 years of age (mean 38 years). Five patients with ANB presented with inflammatory symptoms or elevated levels of catecholamines and their metabolites. Five of the ANB tumors were classified as undifferentiated and three as poorly differentiated with a background of neuropil. These cases often showed immunoreactivity for multiple neural markers such as CD56, chromogranin A, synaptophysin, neurofilament, and neuron-specific enolase, but were negative for CD99, cytokeratins, desmin, myogenin, smooth muscle actin, muscle-specific actin,
CD34
, S-100 protein, and CD45. In contrast, all of the PNETs were positive for CD99, and four (57%) were also positive for cytokeratins. Two cases of ANB of the undifferentiated subtype had ultrastructural features characteristic of
neuroblastoma
and lacked a chimeric transcript (EWS-FLI1or ERG), which is specific for PNET. All five patients with the undifferentiated subtype of ANB and six of the seven patients with PNET died of their disease within 3 years of discovery of the lesion. Our results show that ANB, although rare, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with small, round-cell tumors in the retroperitoneum and abdomen. Appropriate immunohistochemical studies and laboratory examination enable pathologists to distinguish ANB from other differential diagnoses, especially PNET.
...
PMID:Adult neuroblastoma of the retroperitoneum and abdomen: clinicopathologic distinction from primitive neuroectodermal tumor. 1142 Apr 63
Tumor cells that contaminate hematopoietic cell preparations contribute to the relapse of
neuroblastoma
patients who receive autologous stem cell rescue as a component of therapy. Therefore, effective purging methods are needed. This study details in vitro experiments to develop a viral-directed enzyme prodrug purging method that specifically targets
neuroblastoma
cells. The approach uses an adenovirus to deliver the cDNA encoding a rabbit liver carboxylesterase that efficiently activates the prodrug irinotecan,7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxycamptothecin (CPT-11). The data show that an adenoviral multiplicity of infection of 50 transduces 100% of cultured
neuroblastoma
cells and primary tumor cells, irrespective of the level of tumor cell line contamination. Exposure of
neuroblastoma
cell lines or of mixtures of these cell lines with
CD34
(+) cells at a ratio of 10:90 to replication-deficient AdRSVrCE for 24 h and subsequent exposure of cells to 1-5 microM CPT-11 for 4 h increased the toxicity of CPT-11 to three
neuroblastoma
cell lines (SJNB-1, NB-1691, and SK-N-SH) from approximately 20-50-fold and eradicated their clonogenic potential. Also, after "purging," RNA for
neuroblastoma
cell markers (tyrosine hydroxylase, synaptophysin, and N-MYC) was undetectable by reverse transcription-PCR. In contrast, the purging protocol did not affect the number or type of colonies formed by
CD34
(+) cells in an in vitro progenitor cell assay. No bystander effect on
CD34
(+) cells was observed. The method described is being investigated for its potential clinical utility, particularly its efficacy for use with patients having relatively high tumor burdens, because no published methods have been shown to be efficacious when the tumor burden exceeds 1%.
...
PMID:A virus-directed enzyme prodrug therapy approach to purging neuroblastoma cells from hematopoietic cells using adenovirus encoding rabbit carboxylesterase and CPT-11. 1143 45
Low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor (p75) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor family. It may modulate the binding of nerve growth factor (NGF) to the functional high-affinity receptor tyrosine kinase (trk) A. NGF is thought to be responsible for growth, apoptosis, and function of the nervous system. The presence of this receptor (p75) was determined in a large group of neural and nonneural tumors and fetal and adult tissues. One thousand one hundred fifty tumors were analyzed with monoclonal antibody for p75, along with selected normal fetal and adult tissues. Immunoreactivity for p75 was present in adult pericytes, perivascular fibroblasts, basal cells of several types of epithelia, perineurial cells, and dendritic reticulum cells. Additionally, a wide zone of subepithelial mesenchyme and skeletal muscle were positive in the first-trimester fetus, but were diminished or negative in the adult. Consistently positive nonneural mesenchymal tumors included dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans (DFSP), embryonal and alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, synovial sarcoma, and spindle cell hemangio(endotheli)oma. Schwann cell tumors, ganglioneuroma, granular cell tumor, and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) were also p75 positive. Mesenchymal nonneural tumors that were variably positive (32% to 69%) for p75 included fibrosarcoma variants, solitary fibrous tumor, hemangiopericytoma, spindle cell lipoma, Ewing's sarcoma, mesenchymal chondrosarcoma, and malignant melanoma. Nervous system tumors such as paragangliomas,
neuroblastoma
, meningioma, and perineurioma and nonneural mesenchymal tumors, including extraskeletal osteosarcoma, benign fibrous histiocytomas, fibromas, alveolar soft part sarcoma, epithelioid sarcoma, smooth muscle and gastrointestinal stromal tumors, and angiosarcomas, were almost always negative for p75. Epithelial tumors that were consistently positive included mixed tumor and adenoid cystic carcinoma, whereas mesothelioma, adenocarcinomas, and most squamous cell carcinomas were negative. p75 is not a specific marker for nerve sheath tumors. It is present in a variety of other mesenchymal tumors including synovial sarcoma and in
CD34
-positive tumors such as DFSP, spindle cell lipoma, and hemangiopericytoma. The presence of p75 in nonneural tumors such as DFSP and rhabdomyosarcoma mimic its presence in early fetal mesenchyme and skeletal muscle, suggesting oncofetal expression in these tumors. p75 may be useful to distinguish DFSP from benign fibrous histiocytoma.
...
PMID:Low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor (p75) in dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans and other nonneural tumors: a study of 1,150 tumors and fetal and adult normal tissues. 1156 28
We have investigated the purging efficacy of positive selection of autologous mobilized
CD34
(+) peripheral stem cells in 22 children with high-risk
neuroblastoma
.
CD34
(+) cell selection was performed using the method of magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS). The median purity of the
CD34
(+) cells post selection was 97.6% (range 81.7-99.7). For detection of contaminating
neuroblastoma
cells before and after
CD34
(+) selection, the chimeric anti-disialoganglioside GD2 antibody delta ch 14.18 was used. Prior to positive selection, various numbers of contaminating
neuroblastoma
cells were found in 17 patients. After positive
CD34
(+) cell selection, low numbers of
neuroblastoma
cells were only detectable in four patients. In 18 patients, high-dose chemotherapy was performed and the isolated
CD34
(+) cells were reinfused. In all patients, a rapid neutrophil recovery was seen with a median time to reach 0.5 x 10(9)/l neutrophils of 12 days (range 8-24 days). Nine of the 18 patients are free of progression with a median follow-up of 55 months (range 45-70 months). Two patients are alive with relapse, six patients died due to progression or relapse and one patient died due to secondary AML 10 months after transplant while in remission from
neuroblastoma
. In summary, we show that, through a highly effective positive selection method, a high purging efficacy can be obtained without compromising the hematopoietic reconstitution capacity of the graft.
...
PMID:Isolation and transplantation of highly purified autologous peripheral CD34(+) progenitor cells: purging efficacy, hematopoietic reconstitution and long-term outcome in children with high-risk neuroblastoma. 1204 Apr 69
Autologous stem cell transplantation is used to rescue cancer patients from myelosuppression caused by high-dose chemotherapy. However, autologous grafts often contain tumor cells that can contribute directly to relapse. Current purging methods are useful when fewer than 1% tumor cells contaminate the bone marrow, and patients with tumor burdens of >1% are considered ineligible for chemotherapy that necessitates stem cell rescue. Using
neuroblastoma
(NB) as a model system, we developed a method that is effective even with tumor burdens of 10-25%. Mixtures of NB-1691 NB cells and
CD34
(+) hematopoietic cells purged by this method showed no evidence of viable tumor cells as assessed by clonogenic assays or reverse transcription-PCR for the NB cell markers tyrosine hydroxylase and N-MYC. The efficacy and lack of toxicity of the method were verified using in vivo mouse models. Severe combined immunodeficient mice that received purged cell preparations containing 10% NB-1691 cells survived without evidence of disease for the observation period (>1 year), whereas mice that received unpurged cells developed disseminated disease requiring euthanasia 73-96 days after injection of cells. No evidence of toxicity to the mice was detected by numerous laboratory values for bone marrow, liver, and kidney function, and no difference was seen in the ability of purged cell mixtures versus unmanipulated
CD34
(+) cells to reconstitute the marrow of non-obese diabetic severe combined immunodeficient mice. In a pilot study, marrow was obtained from eight patients who had >/=1% metastatic tumor burden. All eight samples were purged to the level of detection by reverse transcription-PCR (samples from seven patients) or clonogenic potential (sample from one patient), whichever assay was used. The described adenovirus/rabbit carboxylesterase/CPT-11 (irinotecan, 7-ethyl-10[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino]carbonyloxycamptothecin) virus-directed enzyme prodrug method may be useful for patients whose tumor burdens exceed 1% at the time of stem cell harvest. Assessment of purging efficacy with additional samples from NB patients is ongoing.
...
PMID:Efficacy and toxicity of a virus-directed enzyme prodrug therapy purging method: preclinical assessment and application to bone marrow samples from neuroblastoma patients. 1220 53
Paediatric solid tumours exhibit steep dose-response curves to alkylating agents and are therefore considered candidates for high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell support. There is growing evidence that autologous stem cell grafts from patients with solid tumours are frequently contaminated with live tumour cells. The objective of this study was to perform, in a preclinical purging model, an initial assessment of the safety and efficacy of a two-step purging procedure that combined Merocyanine 540-mediated photodynamic therapy (MC540-PDT) with a brief exposure to the alkyl-lysophospholipid, Edelfosine. Human and murine bone marrow cells and Neuro-2a murine
neuroblastoma
, SK-N-SH human
neuroblastoma
, SK-ES-1 and U-2 OS human osteosarcoma, G-401 and SK-NEP-1 human Wilms' tumour, and A-204 human rhabdomyosarcoma cells were exposed to a fixed dose of MC540-PDT followed by a brief incubation with graded concentrations of Edelfosine. Survival was subsequently assessed by in vitro clonal assay or, in the case of
CD34
-positive haematopoietic stem cells, by an immunohistochemical method. Combination purging with MC540-PDT and Edelfosine depleted all tumour cells by >4 log while preserving at least 15% of murine granulocyte/macrophage progenitors (CFU-GM), 34% of human CFU-GM, and 31% of human
CD34
-positive cells. The data suggest that combination purging with MC540-PDT and Edelfosine may be useful for the ex vivo purging of autologous stem cell grafts from patients with paediatric solid tumours.
...
PMID:Preferential inactivation of paediatric solid tumour cells by sequential exposure to Merocyanine 540-mediated photodynamic therapy and Edelfosine: implications for the ex vivo purging of autologous haematopoietic stem cell grafts. 1263 81
A 5-year-old boy received
CD34
-positive HLA haplo-identical bone marrow transplantation from his father as treatment for refractory advanced
neuroblastoma
. He had residual disease in the para-aortic lymph nodes and multiple bones after the transplant. However, all of his residual disease had disappeared completely 3 years later. He developed grade I acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) but had no symptoms of chronic GVHD or any other complications. This case demonstrates the possibility of a graft-versus-tumor effect against
neuroblastoma
by HLA-mismatched allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
...
PMID:Graft-versus-tumor effect in a patient with advanced neuroblastoma who received HLA haplo-identical bone marrow transplantation. 1281 85
Human
CD34
(+) cells, highly enriched for hematopoietic stem and progenitors, and CD15(+) cells, more terminally differentiated myeloid cells in blood, represent distinct maturation/differentiation stages. A proteomic approach was used to identify proteins differentially present in these two populations from human cord blood. Cytosolic proteins were extracted and subjected to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometry. On average, 460 protein spots on each gel were detected; 112 and 15 proteins, respectively, were found to be differentially expressed or post-translationally modified in
CD34
(+) and CD15(+) cells. This suggests that
CD34
(+) cells have a relatively larger proteome than mature CD15(+) myeloid cells and production of many stem/progenitor cell-associated proteins ceases or is dramatically down-regulated as the
CD34
(+) cells undergo differentiation. Of approximately 140 protein spots, 47 different proteins were positively identified by mass spectrometry and database search; these proteins belong to several functional categories, including cell signaling, transcription factors, cytoskeletal proteins, metabolism, protein folding, and vesicle trafficking. Multiple heat shock proteins and chaperones, as well as proteins important for intracellular trafficking, were predominantly present in
CD34
(+) cells. Most of the identified proteins in
CD34
(+) cells are expressed in germ cell tumors, as well as in embryonal carcinoma and
neuroblastoma
. Approximately eight novel proteins, whose functions are unknown, were identified. This study presents, for the first time, global cellular protein expression patterns in human
CD34
(+) and CD15(+) cells, which should help to better understand intracellular processes involved in myeloid differentiation and add insight into the functional capabilities of these distinct cell types.
...
PMID:Comparative proteomic analysis of human CD34+ stem/progenitor cells and mature CD15+ myeloid cells. 1553 91
The diagnosis of pediatric tumors relies heavily on immunohistochemical staining of small tissue biopsies, since many entities share a "small blue cell" phenotype. More recently, molecular genetic analysis for detection of specific gene fusion products has become available. With the increased use of such molecular techniques, the authors have noted that tumors with proven molecular diagnoses can exhibit unusual patterns of immunohistochemical staining. This study examines pediatric tumors with a "small blue cell" phenotype in which molecular diagnoses were available where applicable. A panel of immunohistochemical stains was performed (S100, CD56, NB84, CD99 [MIC2], Bcl-2, CD117,
CD34
, desmin, MNF116, and WT1). In the 370 sections from 37 cases, all primitive neuroectodermal tumors, with and without the presence of t(11;22), demonstrated uniform membranous membrane staining with CD99 (MIC2) and focal staining with CD56, NB84, MNF116, and WT1. All rhabdomyosarcomas, both alveolar and embryonal, demonstrated uniform desmin, CD56, and cytoplasmic WT1 immunostaining. Desmoplastic small round cell tumors showed positive cytokeratin staining, with half having "dot-like" cytoplasmic desmin and WT1 positivity; some showed focal positivity for NB84, CD99, and Bcl-2. The "undifferentiated" sarcomas showed the widest range of staining, with no marker staining all cases.
Neuroblastomas
exhibited uniform strong staining for CD56 and NB84 and marked cytoplasmic Bcl-2 positivity, and some cases showed cytoplasmic WT1 expression. Blastematous Wilms' tumors showed uniform strong membranous staining for CD56, uniform cytoplasmic staining for Bcl-2, and nuclear expression of WT1. Embryonal pediatric malignancies can demonstrate apparently nonspecific expression patterns for several antigens, which may reflect developmental immaturity rather than specific differentiation pathways.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical findings in embryonal small round cell tumors with molecular diagnostic confirmation. 1572 86
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