Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Oncogenes are genes associated with causation of cancer. They were originally associated with the ability of retroviruses to cause tumors in animals. These viral oncogenes (V-onc) have their cellular counterparts (C-onc) called Proto oncogenes. Function of Proto oncogenes is to maintain cellular growth and development. Activation of these proto-oncogenes can occur due to mutation which leads to uncontrolled cell growth. The Proto oncogenes can be grouped into different categories based on their protein products, i.e. protein kinases, growth factors, growth factor receptors, and DNA binding proteins. There are also genes that normally suppress malignant transformation and these are called anti oncogenes. Loss of their suppressor activity leads to unimpeded growth. Oncogene abnormalities are seen in pediatric leukemias, lymphomas, and various solid tumors. Anti oncogenes are associated with retinoblastoma (Rb gene), Wilms' tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma and neuroblastoma, etc. Identification of these abnormalities have diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic implications. The utility of oncogenes in classification of human cancer and monitoring cancer therapy is quite clear, but the future of these for therapeutic interventions remains uncertain. Role of c-abl oncogene in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), bcl-2, in lymphomas, N-myc in neuroblastomas and retinoblastoma (Rb) gene in retinoblastomas is well understood and used in designing proper therapeutic approaches. Since oncogenes also control normal cellular function, their use for therapy may be limited by the amount of damage to normal cells. Their maximum therapeutic benefit may be realized only when used in combination with other modalities.
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PMID:Oncogenes: present status. 824 94

For the subgroup of patients with inoperable gastrointestinal stromal tumors, progress has been made by the rapid development and approval of the targeted therapy imatinib mesylate. Small round cell sarcoma, such as Ewing/PNET, desmoplastic small round cell sarcoma and rhabdomyosarcoma, are chemotherapy-sensitive and potentially curable malignancies, which are treated with multimodality, dose-intensitive and neoadjuvant protocols regardless of size or overt metastatic disease. A limited number of effective agents available for the treatment of patients with metastatic adult soft-tissue sarcoma exists, which have failed anthracyline and ifosfamide-based chemotherapy. Most other high-grade (grading >I) so-called adult-type soft-tissue sarcomas such as fibro, lipo, pleomorphic and synovial sarcoma are treated with a anthracycline-based regimen with or without ifosfamide as front-line therapy. In this review, the therapeutic activities of drugs currently available as second-line treatment in patients with metastatic soft tissue sarcoma are summarized, providing an overview of contentious or emerging treatment issues. In relapsed 'adult-type' soft-tissue sarcomas trofosfamide, gemcitabine and ecteinascidin (ET-743) appear to be drugs associated with moderate activity and an acceptable toxicity profile. An interesting finding to be noted is that the different drugs have particular effects in distinct subtypes of soft-tissue sarcoma; however, it has to be taken into account that the number of patients included in those phase II trials are limited. The role of the newer agents (e.g. patupilone derivates, brostallicin) is currently not definable. The so-called selective therapy targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (receptor), epidermal growth factor receptor, c-kit, Raf kinase or platelet-derived growth factor receptor and bcl-2 antisensing, proteasome, protein kinase C/B, and mammalian target of rabamycin inhibition will continue to be tested in gastrointestinal stromal tumors patients refractory to imatinib mesylate as well as in selected sarcoma subtypes.
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PMID:Systemic treatment options for patients with refractory adult-type sarcoma beyond anthracyclines. 1726 55

The pathologic classification of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) into embryonal or alveolar subtype is an important prognostic factor guiding the therapeutic protocol chosen for an individual patient. Unfortunately, this classification is not always straightforward, and the diagnostic criteria are controversial in a subset of cases. Ancillary studies are used to aid in the classification, but their potential use as independent prognostic factors is rarely studied. The aim of this study is to identify immunohistochemical markers of potential prognostic significance in pediatric RMS and to correlate their expression with PAX-3/FKHR and PAX-7/FKHR fusion status. A single tissue microarray containing 71 paraffin-embedded pediatric RMSs was immunostained with antibodies against p53, bcl-2, Ki-67, CD44, myogenin, and MyoD1. The tissue microarray and whole paraffin blocks were studied for PAX-3/FKHR and PAX-7/FKHR gene fusions by fluorescence in situ hybridization and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Clinical follow-up data were available for each patient. Immunohistochemical staining results and translocation status were correlated with recurrence-free interval (RFI) and overall survival (OS) using the Kaplan-Meier method, the log-rank test, and Cox proportional hazard regression. The minimum clinical follow-up interval was 24 months (median follow-up=57 mo). On univariable analysis, immunohistochemical expression of myogenin, bcl-2, and identification of a gene fusion were associated with decreased 5-year RFI and 10-year OS (myogenin RFI P=0.0028, OS P=0.0021; bcl-2 RFI P=0.037, OS P=0.032; gene fusion RFI P=0.0001, OS P=0.0058). After adjustment for Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study-TNM stage, tumor site, age, tumor histology, and translocation status by multivariable analysis, only myogenin retained an independent association with RFI (P=0.034) and OS (P=0.0069). In this retrospective analysis, diffuse immunohistochemical reactivity for myogenin in RMS correlates with decreased RFI and OS, independent of histologic subtype, translocation status, tumor site, or stage.
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PMID:Diffuse myogenin expression by immunohistochemistry is an independent marker of poor survival in pediatric rhabdomyosarcoma: a tissue microarray study of 71 primary tumors including correlation with molecular phenotype. 1870 38