Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0153690 (bone metastases)
6,382 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the antitumor activity of vinorelbine and oral estramustine phosphate in patients with metastatic, hormone-refractory prostate cancer. We evaluated the activity of this association using the following schedule: estramustine phosphate 600 mg/m2/day orally days 1-42 and vinorelbine 25 mg/m1 days 1, 8, 22, 29 cycles repeated every 56 days. Twenty-five patients were included in the study, 24 being evaluable for response and 25 for toxicity. Out of 5 patients with measurable disease, none had an objective response. Of the 24 assessable patients with bone metastases, 9 patients had a > or = 65% decline in pretreatment prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level, stable disease was observed in 10 and 5 patients progressed. Toxicities were minimal. Anemia was observed in 5 patients, alopecia in 4 and nausea and vomiting was observed in 6 patients. Anorexia and weight loss of more than 10% were observed in 2 patients. This combination is active and well tolerated in hormone-resistant prostate cancer. These results support the therapeutic strategy of combining agents that impair microtubule function.
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PMID:Phase II study of estramustine and vinorelbine in hormone-refractory prostate carcinoma patients. 963 14

The aim of this study was to analyse the clinical utility of serum bone alkaline phosphatase (BAP) in addition to prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in the staging of newly diagnosed untreated prostate cancer patients. A prospective study was conducted, analysing serum BAP and PSA concentrations in 295 consecutive newly diagnosed untreated prostate cancer patients (T1-4, N0-1, M0-1b), 93 of whom had bone metastases on bone scan. The relationship of each marker with extent of bone disease, the influence of several clinical variables on both serum marker levels, the efficiency in predicting bone metastasis through receiver operating characteristic curves and, finally, the clinical utility in avoiding unnecessary bone scans were determined. Significant differences were found in the serum levels of both BAP and PSA between patients with and patients without bone metastases. Multiple regression analysis showed the extent of bone disease to be the only variable that influenced both serum levels. However, while serum BAP levels showed a statistical relationship with extent of bone disease, serum PSA levels did not. The best prediction of bone scan findings was obtained with the combination of both markers using a cut-off of 20 ng/ml, with positive and negative predictive values of 46.5% and 100%, respectively. This greater efficiency could permit 32.2% of initial bone scans to be avoided. False-positive and false-negative rates of BAP were 7.5% and 14%, respectively. This study suggests that serum BAP levels could play a complementary role in the diagnosis of bone metastasis in prostate cancer patients. This marker could provide useful clinical information on the degree of skeletal metastasis and constitute an easy way of enhancing the clinical utility of PSA. The addition of this marker to PSA in the initial evaluation could permit staging bone scan to be avoided at a PSA range of 10-20 ng/ml, with significant implications for cost saving.
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PMID:Serum bone alkaline phosphatase levels enhance the clinical utility of prostate specific antigen in the staging of newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients. 1036 48

Rhenium-186 (tin)-labeled hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate (186Re-labeled HEDP) was evaluated in 27 men with progressive androgen-independent prostate cancer and bone metastases. Administered activities ranged from 1251 to 4336 MBq (33.8-117.2 mCi). The primary objectives were to assess tumor targeting, normal organ dosimetry, and safety. Antitumor effects were assessed by posttherapy changes in prostate-specific antigen and, when present, palliation of pain. Whole-body kinetics, blood and kidney clearance, skeletal dose, marrow dose, and urinary excretion of the isotope were assessed. Targeting of skeletal disease was observed over the period of quantification (4-168 h). Radiation doses to whole body, bladder, and kidney were well tolerated. The dose-limiting toxicity was myelosuppression (grade III) at 4107 MBq (111 mCi) and grade II at 296 MBq (80 mCi). Probe clearance (whole body) and urinary excretion measurements were highly correlated. Of the six patients treated at the highest dosage schedules (three at 1510 MBq/m2 and three at 1665 MBq/m2), three showed a posttherapy decline in prostate-specific antigen of 50% or more. The declines were not sustained. The determination of total activity retained at 24 h, as well as an estimate of marrow dose, correlated with the amount of myelosuppression observed. These results suggest that a single 24-h measurement of retained activity would allow individualized dosing and an improved therapeutic index relative to fixed dosing schema. Repetitive dosing is required to increase palliation.
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PMID:Rhenium-186-labeled hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate dosimetry and dosing guidelines for the palliation of skeletal metastases from androgen-independent prostate cancer. 1038 13

The characteristic sclerotic appearance of bone metastases from prostate cancer is unexplained but could involve excess peritumoural activity of osteoblast mitogens such as the insulin-like growth factors (IGFs). Since prostatic metastases are distinguished by androgen-dependent secretion of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), a serine protease which cleaves extracellular IGF-binding proteins and thereby enhances the bioavailability of IGFs, the relationship was examined between tumour PSA expression and the osteoblastic phenotype. To this end, a cohort of 27 prostate cancer patients was evaluated to determine the relationship between serum PSA and radiographic bone lesion density at first presentation with metastatic disease. No linear correlation between absolute PSA levels and metastatic osteosclerosis was apparent. However, non-parametric statistical analysis revealed a highly significant link between low-PSA (<20 ng/ml) metastatic prostate cancer and osteolytic bone lesions (p<0.0001, chi(2)=21.5). This finding raises the possibility that the osteoblastic phenotype of prostate cancer derives in part from PSA-dependent proteolysis of IGF-binding proteins within bone matrix.
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PMID:Correlation of the osteoblastic phenotype with prostate-specific antigen expression in metastatic prostate cancer: implications for paracrine growth. 1041 96

A case of severe nephrotic syndrome (urinary protein excretion 12.9 g/day) due to membranous nephropathy associated with untreated prostate cancer and multiple bone metastases is described. A combination of initial endocrine treatment and steroid therapy resulted in normalization of prostate-specific antigen levels followed by a rapid decrease of urinary protein excretion within 4 months. No proteinuria was subsequently detected. Seven months after the initiation of therapy, the patient remained well with complete clinical remission from the nephrotic syndrome. This rapid achievement of remission may have been due to tumor shrinkage by androgen ablation in addition to steroid therapy of the membranous nephropathy. The nephrotic syndrome is a rare complication of prostate cancer, and, to the best of our knowledge, no previous cases have been reported of membranous nephropathy as one of the first disease manifestations.
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PMID:Nephrotic syndrome due to membranous nephropathy associated with metastatic prostate cancer: rapid remission after initial endocrine therapy. 1064 12

Fine-needle aspiration biopsy is a minimally invasive technique for obtaining sample material suitable not only for cytological grading but also for flow cytometry and for biochemical analyses. The prognostic value of tissue prostate-specific antigen (T-PSA) from fine-needle aspiration biopsies was compared with serum total and free prostate-specific antigen, the ratio of free:total serum prostate-specific antigen, tumor stage, cytological grade, and DNA ploidy in 179 patients with stage T2-T4 prostate cancer (CAP). The patients, who were free from bone metastases at the time of diagnosis, were treated by either orchidectomy or medical castration with GnRH analogues or high-dose parenteral depot estrogens. They were followed for at least for 71 months or until death, and the different variables were correlated to time to progression and time to death from CAP. Using Cox univariate analysis, T-PSA was shown to be the most important factor in predicting time to progression and time to death. When the patients were divided into three groups with respect to T-PSA, 56 of 60 (93%) of the patients with low T-PSA levels developed progressive disease, and 52 of 60 (87%) died of CAP. For patients with intermediate T-PSA levels, the corresponding figures were 9 of 60 (15%) and 6 of 60 (10%). None of the 59 patients with high T-PSA values developed progressive disease. Similar but less pronounced relationships were found between tumor progress and CAP-specific death on the one hand and clinical stage, cytological grade, and DNA ploidy on the other. In a Cox multivariate stepwise analysis, T-PSA was the only important factor for time to progression and death. This was also true for the subgroup of patients with stages T2 and T3 disease only. The study shows that T-PSA is superior to other hitherto routinely used markers for the prediction of outcome of hormone-treated patients with newly diagnosed CAP.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of tissue prostate-specific antigen in endocrine-treated prostate carcinomas. 1065 45

The cut-off value of serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level in prediction of bone metastases and the correlation of serum PSA with the clinical stage, grade, score and the rate of bone metastases have been investigated in cases of prostate cancer (PCa). The study population consisted of 160 patients with histologically proven PCa between April, 1993 and August, 1996. The negative predictive value and the sensitivity were the highest (94%) in patients with a serum PSA value less than 10 ng/ml. We claim that in patients with PSA values less than 10 ng/ml whole body bone scan is not necessary.
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PMID:The value of serum prostate specific antigen and other parameters in detecting bone metastases in prostate cancer. 1066 43

We established two human prostate cancer cell lines, MDA PCa 2a and MDA PCa 2b, the TabBO model system, that reflect common features of human androgen-independent prostate cancer that are not present in other model systems: bone origin, prostate-specific antigen production, androgen receptor expression, and androgen sensitivity. We therefore hypothesized that molecular pathways in our model system reflect common alterations responsible for the progression of a subset of human prostate cancer. Progression to androgen independence has been hypothesized to be largely associated with impairment of the regulation of cell growth or apoptosis of prostate cancer cells. Therefore, in this study, we examined molecular markers known or suspected to be important in prostate cancer progression and key regulators of cell growth and apoptosis: p53, p21WAF1/CIP1, Bcl-2, Bax, retinoblastoma (Rb), and p16INK4A/MITS1. We analyzed the expression of these markers in the cell lines, their tumor of origin, and tumors derived from the cell lines by s.c. inoculation into nude mice. DNA sequencing of the entire open reading frames of the p53 and p21 genes revealed no mutations. Additionally, accumulation of the p53 protein was not found by Western blot analysis, nor was overexpression of the Bcl-2 oncoprotein detected. Bax expression was detected in MDA PCa 2a cells, whereas it was absent in MDA PCa 2b. Rb and p16 protein expression was normal as measured by both Western blot and immunochemical analyses. Immunohistochemical studies of p53, p21, Bcl-2, and Rb in both samples from the original human cancer from which the lines were derived and mouse xenografts derived from the lines revealed similar levels of protein. These results are consistent with reports indicating that 40-50% of bone metastases of prostate cancer have wild-type p53, 50-70% do not overexpress the Bcl-2 protein, and mutations in the p21 gene are rare. Therefore, we conclude that MDA PCa 2a and MDA PCa 2b reflect molecular pathways in a common subset of human androgen-independent prostate cancer and that important molecular players in apoptosis (namely, p53 and Bcl-2) seem to be intact in this subset of androgen-independent prostate cancer. Understanding the signal-transduction pathways operating in these cell lines may help to identify therapeutic targets for prostate cancer.
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PMID:TabBO: a model reflecting common molecular features of androgen-independent prostate cancer. 1074 51

Cyclin D1 is a key regulator of the G1 phase progression of the cell cycle. There is increasing evidence that deregulated cyclin D1 expression is implicated in tumorigenesis and tumor progression in certain neoplasms. Recently, it has been reported that cyclin D1 overexpression might be related to the evolution of androgen-independent disease in prostate cancer. This study was conducted to investigate patterns of cyclin D1 expression in prostate cancer samples representing different points in the natural history and treatment evolution of the disease. Association with clinical outcomes was also explored. Using immunohistochemistry, 86 radical prostatectomy specimens (53 naive and 33 after androgen deprivation) and 22 androgen-independent bone metastases were studied. We examined the difference in cyclin D1 expression in primary versus metastatic cases. In addition, we examined the association in primary cases between cyclin D1 expression and clinicopathological parameters of poor clinical outcome, including time to prostate-specific antigen relapse and Ki67 proliferative index. Cyclin D1-positive phenotype, defined as identification of positive immunoreactivity in the nuclei of > or =20% of tumor cells, was observed in 10 of 86 (11%) primary cases compared with 15 of 22 (68%) androgen-independent bone metastases (P = 0.001). There was no correlation between cyclin D1 overexpression and either Gleason score, neo-adjuvant hormone treatment, or prostate-specific antigen relapse We observed a statistical association between cyclin D1 overexpression and high Ki67 proliferative index, defined as > or =20% of positive tumor cells (P = 0.02). These data support the hypothesis that cyclin D1 overexpression may represent an oncogenic event in androgen-independent metastatic prostate cancer to the bone.
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PMID:Overexpression of cyclin D1 is associated with metastatic prostate cancer to bone. 1081 12

The bone scan patterns of benign and malignant uptake in 432 patients with newly diagnosed prostate carcinoma were reviewed in relation to prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels determined within 4 months of scintigraphy. Scan results were categorized in terms of likelihood of metastatic disease and anatomical locations of benign and malignant lesions were tabulated. At least one suspect focus was identified in 138 scans (32%), and metastatic bone disease was present in 38 (9%). Metastatic disease prevalence increased from 1% for PSA <20 ng x ml(-1) to 58% for PSA>100 ng x ml(-1). Among patients with PSA>20 ng x ml(-1) (n = 157), 70 (45%) had at least one bone scan finding of concern for metastases and 35 (22%) proved to have metastatic disease. Almost all scans with metastases had either limited disease (< or = 5 suspicious lesions; n = 16; 42%) or extensive metastases (> 20 abnormalities; n = 19; 50%). The majority of patients with limited skeletal metastases had PSA < 100 ng x ml(-1) (11/16; 69%), while almost all patients with extensive skeletal involvement had PSA >100 ng x ml(-1) (17/19; 89%). Among those with limited metastatic disease, most (13/16; 81%) had at least one lesion in the pelvis or sacrum; the next most common sites were in the thoracic and lumbar spine (six each; 38%). In scans with a low to moderate suspicion for bone metastases, the only anatomical site with a significantly higher prevalence of malignant than benign lesions was the pelvis.
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PMID:Association of prostate-specific antigen levels and patterns of benign and malignant uptake detected. on bone scintigraphy in patients with newly diagnosed prostate carcinoma. 1099 63


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