Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029463 (osteosarcoma)
16,637 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have previously characterized human smooth muscle myosin light chain (MLC)-2 isoform by complementary DNA cloning and have shown that this isoform is expressed in a number of nonmuscle cells such as fibroblast cells. In this report, we show that when human osteosarcoma derived clonal cells (TE 85 clone F-5) (HOS), which are immortalized and nontumorigenic, undergo transformation following infection by Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (K-HOS) or by a chemical carcinogen [N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG-HOS)], the smooth muscle MLC-2 mRNA is repressed. Revertants of transformed K-HOS cells (K-HOS312H) show normal levels of smooth muscle MLC-2 mRNA. Transformation of HOS cells by Ha-ras oncogene sequences, either by retroviral infection or by transfection followed by selection for tumorigenic cells in nude mice, results in complete repression of smooth muscle MLC-2 mRNA level. Treatment of HOS cells with tumor promoting phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, results in repression of smooth muscle MLC-2 mRNA. Smooth muscle MLC-2 mRNA level is repressed in many, but not all, transformed cell lines, suggesting that it is not an indirect consequence of transformation but is specific to the agent that brings about transformation. HOS cells synthesize three MLC-2 protein species resolved by the two-dimensional gel electrophoretic system. The identity of the smooth muscle MLC-2 isoform was established by coelectrophoresis of the in vitro synthesized MLC-2 protein corresponding to the cloned complementary DNA in the two-dimensional gel system along with total [35S]methionine labeled HOS cell proteins. Quantitative analysis of MLC-2 isoforms in different HOS cells indicates that the synthesis of smooth muscle MLC-2 isoform is specifically repressed to an undetectable level in ras transformed and MNNG transformed cells and also following treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate.
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PMID:Human smooth muscle myosin light chain-2 gene expression is repressed in ras transformed fibroblast cells. 159 78

The study comprised 97 patients treated by the Scandinavian Sarcoma Group for high-grade, extremity-localized osteosarcoma. Chemotherapy was according to the T-10 protocol, with four courses of high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX) given preoperatively at weekly intervals. Seventeen percent of the patients obtained a good (grade III or IV) histologic response, 62% a moderate (grade II) response and 21% a poor (grade I) response. Grade II-IV responders had significantly higher serum MTX levels than grade I responders. Good responders had significantly better survival than moderate/poor responders, and had a trend towards both lower recurrence rate and longer time to recurrence. Five-year overall and relapse-free survival for all patients was 63% and 53%, respectively. Within a group of patients with similar primary tumour response, there was a trend for better survival with increasing serum MTX levels, indicating that individualization of MTX doses according to renal excretion rates may be indicated. The present results underline the importance of introducing effective chemotherapy from the start of osteosarcoma treatment, and that HDMTX alone seems to be insufficient preoperative therapy. The toxicity of HDMTX is generally mild, but we have by cerebral MRI found signal changes in white matter in 14/22 patients; changes that may represent subclinical MTX CNS toxicity. In the subsequent SSG osteosarcoma protocol, cisplatin and doxorubicin has been added to HDMTX from the start of treatment. Our data also suggest that an aggressive approach involving second-line chemotherapy and surgery is indicated for metastatic disease and that such an approach may lead to long-term survival in up to 30% of patients.
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PMID:The treatment of osteosarcoma: present trends. The Scandinavian Sarcoma Group experience. 162 72

A Head and Neck Sarcoma Registry was established by the Society of Head and Neck Surgeons to review treatment results of a rare tumor by surgeons with special interest in this anatomic site. Two hundred fourteen patients were analyzed. There were 194 adult tumors and 20 pediatric tumors. The major sites included parotid and neck, 20%; face and forehead, 18%; maxilla and palate, 13%; scalp, 12%; mandible, 11%; paranasal sinuses, 7%; larynx, 2%; and oral cavity, 5%. Eighty-four percent were resectable. The disease-free survival was 56%; overall survival was 70% at 5 years. Major determinants of survival were adequacy of resection (margins free of tumor) and tumor type. Survival differed according to tumor cell type (tumor grade was not available). Patients with chondrosarcoma and dermatofibrosarcoma had survival approaching 100%. Patients with malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) and fibrosarcoma (FSA) had intermediate survival of 60% to 70%. The worst survival, less than 50% at 5 years, occurred in patients with osteosarcoma, angiosarcoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma in decreasing order. This suggests a rationale for identifying high-risk patients for prospective adjuvant protocols. This study emphasizes the value of recording uncommon tumors to provide relevant information for future study and possibly therapy.
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PMID:Head and neck sarcoma: report of the Head and Neck Sarcoma Registry. Society of Head and Neck Surgeons Committee on Research. 162 88

Classifying soft tissue tumors of the head and neck is often difficult for both surgeon and pathologist because of the potential similarities in appearance of metastatic lesions, epithelial tumors, lymphomas, and inflammatory processes. This paper discusses four unusual soft tissue tumors of the head and neck: osteosarcoma of the mandible, biphasic synovial cell sarcoma of the hypopharynx, soft part sarcoma of the maxillary sinus/alveolus, and adult rhabdomyoma of the larynx. Precise diagnosis of these lesions requires adequate tissue sampling, immunocytochemical staining, and electron microscopy. The clinical and pathological features of these tumors, as well as a practical approach to the diagnosis, is presented.
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PMID:Diagnostic dilemmas in soft tissue tumors of the head and neck. 166 23

Recent studies of Class II histocompatibility antigen expression in bone and soft tissue sarcomas have suggested that malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) may express HLA-DR, whereas histologically similar pleomorphic, epithelioid, and spindle cell malignant neoplasms generally do not. To test whether these observations are reproducible in the differential diagnosis of soft tissue sarcomas, anti-HLA-DR antibodies LK8D3 and LN3 were applied to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of MFH, neurofibrosarcoma (NFS), leiomyosarcoma (LMS), synovial sarcoma (SS), fibrosarcoma (FS), angiosarcoma (AS), Kaposi's sarcoma (KS), chondrosarcoma (ChS), "dedifferentiated" chondrosarcoma (DChS), osteosarcoma (OS), epithelioid sarcoma (ES), and clear cell sarcoma (CCS; malignant melanoma of soft parts). The only consistent difference in Class II antigen expression was seen in the group of neoplasms composed of large polygonal cells. Among the latter lesions, four of six clear cell sarcomas were labeled by LK8D3 or LN3, but none of 12 epithelioid sarcomas were reactive. Otherwise, a diversity of tumors in other morphologic categories expressed Class II antigens, with no clear diagnostic patterns. These results may be of use in the diagnostic separation of large cell epithelioid tumors of soft tissue, but neither LN3 nor LK8D3 appears to be helpful in the identification of other sarcomas.
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PMID:HLA-DR (Ia-like) reactivity in tumors of bone and soft tissue: an immunohistochemical comparison of monoclonal antibodies LN3 and LK8D3 in routinely processed specimens. 169 91

The production and detailed immunostaining properties of a new rat monoclonal antibody (ICR.2) to epithelial membrane antigen are reported. The antibody was selected for its ability to compete with the polyclonal antiserum (M7), used in the original immunohistological studies, in order that it might serve as a direct replacement in diagnosing epithelial tumours. Most of the staining reactions on normal tissues were identical to those previously reported with M7 but there were some important differences. They included: positivity of renal and adrenal capsular fibroblasts, perineurium, some myoepithelial and smooth muscle cells, occasional osteoblasts and squamous and thyroid follicular epithelium in the normal state. The intercellular canaliculi of sweat glands and secretory canaliculi of gastric oxyntic cells were clearly demonstrated. These staining reactions could be obtained with M7 when a sensitive detection system was used although the results were usually weak and inconsistent. Nearly all adenosquamous and transitional carcinomas were positive. The remaining tumours fell into three major groups: (1) those which were consistently or nearly consistently negative--melanoma, seminoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, alveolar soft part sarcoma, adrenal cortical carcinoma, granulocytic sarcoma, paraganglioma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Hodgkin's disease and embryonal carcinoma: (2) those which were either negative or positive with distinctive patterns of staining--basal cell carcinoma, embryonal tumours: and (3) non-epithelial tumours that were consistently positive--epithelioid sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, osteosarcoma, chordoma and myeloma--or positive in a significant minority of cases--leiomyosarcoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, clear cell sarcoma of tendon sheath, various neuroectodermal tumours.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Detailed investigation of the diagnostic value in tumour histopathology of ICR.2, a new monoclonal antibody to epithelial membrane antigen. 169 88

Seventy-five primary sarcomas of the heart were classified by histologic appearance as angiosarcoma (26 cases), undifferentiated sarcoma (18 cases), osteosarcoma (9 cases), fibrosarcoma (6 cases), malignant fibrous histiocytoma (6 cases), leiomyosarcoma (4 cases), myxosarcoma (3 cases), synovial sarcoma (2 cases), and neurofibrosarcoma (1 case). The ages of the patients ranged from 1 to 75 years at the time of presentation (mean, 39 years). Angiosarcomas were predominantly right-sided and osteosarcomas left-sided. Forty patients treated surgically were examined, and survival correlated with clinical and histologic parameters. the survival rate was poor, with a mean of 11 months and median of 6 months. By univariate analysis, the survival rate was more favorable for patients with tumors located on the left side of the heart, without necrosis, with a low mitotic count, and without metastasis at diagnosis. Survival rates were better in patients receiving chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Age, gender, presence of differentiation, and histologic type did not affect prognosis. By multivariate analysis, a low level of mitotic activity and any therapy were the only significant factors affecting survival rate. Immunostaining with commercially available antisera was useful in the diagnosis of sarcoma but not in subclassification of 19 tumors so tested. Although the prognosis for patients with cardiac sarcomas is dismal, histologic grading is useful in predicting outcome, as has been shown for soft tissue sarcomas of other sites.
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PMID:Primary sarcomas of the heart. 172 67

Previous reports suggest an increased risk of a second cancer, primarily osteosarcoma, in survivors of Ewing's sarcoma. In a retrospective review of 25 long-term irradiated survivors of Ewing's sarcoma, the incidence of second cancers was determined. The patients were free of disease for more than three years (except for one patient who developed a second cancer 2.5 years after diagnosis), with a median follow-up period of 7.6 years. All received megavoltage radiation to the primary tumor. Twenty-four of the 25 patients were treated with chemotherapy. Second cancers developed in two patients. Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) developed in a seven-year-old 15 months after treatment. An osteosarcoma developed within an irradiated field in a 13-year-old three years after treatment. The actuarial risk of developing a second cancer at five years is 8% whereas the actuarial risk of developing a bone sarcoma is 4%. Genetic factors may play a role in the development of AML in patients with Ewing's sarcoma. Megavoltage radiation, particularly doses greater than 60 Gy, as well as alkylating agent chemotherapy may contribute to the risk for bone sarcoma. The risk of a second cancer after successful treatment of Ewing's sarcoma is similar to that expected for survivors of all childhood cancers.
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PMID:Second cancers in long-term survivors of Ewing's sarcoma. 172 13

The purpose of this study is to review survival, treatment methods and criteria for diagnosis of osteosarcoma at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital during two periods in the last 50 years. The records of 22 patients diagnosed with osteosarcoma and nine with osteosarcoma in Paget's disease (from 1939 to 1950) were reviewed. All but one had died within three years. One patient survived six years. The second series was taken from 1983 to 1990. Forty-nine patients, including three with Paget's sarcoma, were studied. Probability of survival was estimated by actuarial analysis using Kaplan-Meier curves. Overall survival was estimated at 45%. Those patients who were free of metastatic disease at the conclusion of their treatment were estimated to have a probability of survival of 85%.
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PMID:Osteosarcoma: then and now. A fifty year review at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. 173 37

A case of primary osteogenic sarcoma of the kidney is presented. The patient, a 75-year-old man, presented with flank pain, weight loss, and a lower lip lesion. Biopsy of the lip lesion showed metastatic sarcoma and nephrectomy revealed a primary osteogenic sarcoma. Ultrastructural and immunohistochemical studies confirmed the mesenchymal nature of the lesion and helped exclude sarcomatoid renal cell carcinoma from the differential diagnosis. Multiple samples of the primary tumor and metastatic deposits analyzed by DNA flow cytometry all showed a diploid DNA content. Clinically the tumor has pursued a slowly progressive course, with metastases.
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PMID:Primary osteosarcoma of the kidney. Report of a case studied by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, and DNA flow cytometry. 176 19


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