Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033036 (APC)
10,214 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The growing understanding of the epigenetic changes associated with cancer, including aberrant promoter methylation of tumor suppressor genes that afford selective growth advantages to human neoplasms, suggests that the characterization of gene methylation patterns among gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) may be useful for predicting tumor behavior. Thirty-eight c-kit-positive gastric stromal tumors were subjected to methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (MSP) to detect promoter methylation associated with 11 candidate tumor suppressor genes (p16/INK4a, APC, MGMT, hMLH1, p73, E-cadherin, RAR-beta, RASSF1A, RB, ER, and DAPK), established to have a role in tumorigenesis of several solid human organs. Aberrant methylation of any of the 11 candidate tumor suppressor genes was detected in 84% of all GISTs. In decreasing order of frequency, the six most commonly methylated genes were: MGMT (47%), p16 (45%), RASSF1A (40%), E-cadherin (37%), hMLH1 (34%), and APC (31%). For all of the GISTs, promoter methylation was less reliable than tumor mitotic rate in predicting 5-year tumor-free survival for the GISTs; however, E-cadherin methylation was a multivariate prognostic factor for early recurrence of GISTs (50% at 2 years; P=0.030). Among the mitotically active (>5 per 50 high-power field), histologically indistinguishable GISTs, E-cadherin methylation was an independent predictor of tumor-related mortality: 5-year disease-free survival was worse for the E-cadherin methylated GISTs (19%) compared to the E-cadherin unmethylated tumors (71%; P=0.010). Detection of methylation within selected genes may afford a reliable and accurate molecular marker system for predicting neoplastic behavior among GISTs. This study supports the methylation status of E-cadherin as a prognostic marker for early GIST recurrence and survival.
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PMID:Tumor suppressor gene hypermethylation as a predictor of gastric stromal tumor behavior. 1467 10

The recent progress of the biology of the locally aggressive sarcomas of soft tissues and related connective tissue tumors enabled to reclassify molecular and histological entities of the disease. Six subgroups of sarcomas are identified with specific molecular alterations, the targeted treatments of which are the object of this article: 1) sarcomas with specific translocations with fusion oncogenes (DFSP, PVNS); 2) sarcomas with tyrosine kinase mutations (KIT in GIST); 3) tumors with deletion of tumor suppressor genes (TSC in the PEComes, NF1 involved in type 1 neurofibromatosis; 4) sarcomas with MDM2/CDK4 amplification in the 12q13-15 amplicon, i.e. well differentiated or dedifferentiated liposarcomas; 5) sarcomas with complex genetics present more unrefined genetic changes (leiomyosarcomas, osteosarcomas). On top these 5 groups, desmoids tumors characterized by alterations of the Wnt, beta catenin, APC, and giant cell tumors of the bone, in which RANK/RANKL operates a complex interaction between the cellular stroma and giant tumor cells. The identification of these abnormal ways of road marking to licence the development of effective targeted therapeutic agents against certain rare histological connective subcategories of sarcomas and tumors with local aggressiveness, in particular DFSP, PVNS, GCST, PEComes, endometrial stromal sarcomas, Ewing sarcomas, etc. Imatinib is used in the treatment of DFSP, characterized by a translocation of the gene PDGF, or in pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS), a tumor of soft part also locally aggressive, caused by an abnormality of the gene coding for the M-CSF. Several clinical trials of phase I and II trials demonstrated the antitumor activity of anti-IGF1R antibodies in Ewing, whose fusion gene downregulates IGFBP3. Inhibitors of MDM2 are in the course of clinical evaluation in liposarcomas. Inhibitors of mTOR (sirolimus, temsirolimus) demonstrated an antitumoral activity in the PEComas. The molecular characterization of sarcomas allowed to develop therapeutic targeted to correct the responsible abnormalities. Translational research is and will be an essential tool for the development of new treatments and the identification of the mechanisms of answer and resistance set up by these tumors.
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PMID:[Targeted treatment of rare connective tissue tumors and sarcomas]. 2049 11

A 91-year-old woman was referred to our hospital with a primary complaint of hematochezia. A rectal submucosal tumor and an acute hemorrhagic rectal ulcer were noted on colonoscopy. After hemostasis was achieved with APC, the patient was diagnosed with a GIST by EUS-FNA. We performed TAE of the middle and inferior rectal artery to secure hemostasis, because these arteries were also observed to be bleeding during hospitalization. A CT scan and colonoscopy revealed that the rectal GIST had reduced and that the acute rectal ulcer had been successfully treated. We report a case in which TAE was used to achieve tumor reduction of a hemorrhagic rectal GIST.
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PMID:[A case of transcatheter arterial embolization for reduction of a hemorrhagic rectal gastrointestinal stromal tumor]. 2605 Jul 28

The association of non-hereditary (sporadic) gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) and second primary malignancies is known to be nonrandom, although the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unknown. In this study, 136 of 749 (18.1%) patients with sporadic GISTs were found to have additional associated cancers, with gastrointestinal and genitourinary/gynecologic/breast cancers being the most prevalent. Gene mutations in GISTs and their associated colorectal cancers (CRCs) (n=9) were analyzed using a panel of 409 cancer-related genes, while a separate group of 40 sporadic CRCs not associated with GISTs served as controls. All 9 of the GISTs had either KIT (8 of 9) or PDGFRA (1 of 9) mutations that were not present in their associated CRCs. Conversely, all but one of the 9 GIST-associated CRCs exhibited an APC mutation, a TP53 mutation or both, while none of their corresponding GISTs harbored either APC or TP53 mutations. The genetic profile of CRCs with and without associated GISTs did not differ. Although population-based studies and case series worldwide, including ours, have unanimously indicated that the GIST-CRC association is nonrandom, our targeted ultra-deep sequencing unveiled a lack of driver-gene mutations linking sporadic GISTs to highly prevalent second primaries. Further studies are needed to elucidate other genetic alterations that may be responsible for this puzzling contradiction.
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PMID:Targeted ultra-deep sequencing unveils a lack of driver-gene mutations linking non-hereditary gastrointestinal stromal tumors and highly prevalent second primary malignancies: random or nonrandom, that is the question. 2780 9