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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Highly purified antibodies to two ubiquitous components of basement membrane, type IV collagen and laminin, were applied to both fresh-frozen and formalin-fixed tissue sections of a variety of invasive carcinomas, carcinomas in situ, and their "look-alike" benign counterparts. These included lesions of the breast (infiltrating ductal carcinoma, comedocarcinoma, and sclerosing adenosis); lesions of the skin (squamous cell carcinoma,
Bowen's disease
, and pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia); lesions of the pancreas (adenocarcinoma and
pancreatitis
); lesions of the prostate (adenocarcinoma and benign prostatic hyperplasia); and other epithelial lesions of the invasive, in situ, and benign category. By both immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase techniques, benign and in situ lesions showed intact basement membranes with linear staining of type IV collagen and laminin. The majority of invasive carcinomas, in contrast, lacked immunoreactivity for both of these basement membrane components. In cases of in situ carcinoma with microinvasion, there was thinning, fragmentation, and disruption of the basement membrane in the foci of microinvasion but not elsewhere. Utilizing antibodies to type IV collagen and laminin aids in both understanding the pathophysiology of the invasive process and the recognition of its presence in tissue sections.
...
PMID:Loss of basement membrane components by invasive tumors but not by their benign counterparts. 634 6
In the prospective clinical long-term study of 246 patients with chronic pancreatitis, 26 patients (24 men) developed 27 histologically proved malignant tumors (11%). Four additional patients with neoplasia were excluded (papilloma, two;
Bowen's disease
of the tonsils, one; and seminoma, one, occurring 8 years before onset of
pancreatitis
). In six patients pancreatic cancer was diagnosed (2.4%), which indicates a slightly increased risk over the general population. Interestingly, 21 patients developed extrapancreatic cancer (8.5%), including a very high incidence that has not been noted previously. The cancers were located in the oral cavity (in six), larynx (three), bronchus (eight), and gastrointestinal tract (four). The data suggest a causal relationship between chronic pancreatitis and cancer. As possible factors, smoking, alcohol abuse, diabetes, malnutrition, immune deficiency, and high dietary fat intake are discussed. There is, however, no definite evidence for any single known factor.
...
PMID:High incidence of extrapancreatic carcinoma in chronic pancreatitis. 743