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)

Forty patients with hypercalcaemia (2.75 to 3.5 mmoles/l) due to bone metastases or to a neoplastic syndrome were treated with synthetic human calcitonin after previous hyperhydration. On entering the study, the patients were allocated at random to either an 0.5 mg dose or a 1 mg dose of the compound administered 6-hourly by the intravenous route. Calcemia was measured every 6 hours: if it became normal, treatment was discontinued 12 hours later, but if after 3 injections the blood calcium level had not been reduced by more than 0.4 mmoles/l, incremental doses of calcitonin were given. Synthetic human calcitonin reduced calcemia by more than 0.4 mmoles/l in 22 patients (group 1) and brought it down to normal value in 18 of these 8 hours on average after the first injection. A new rise in calcemia was observed in 12/18 cases 44 hours on average after treatment was discontinued. Reduction of calcemia by less than 0.4 mmoles/l was observed in 11 patients (group 2). Treatment was ineffective in 7 patients (group 3). There were no significant differences between the 3 groups in mean values and variances of the initial blood calcium levels. Whatever the initial dose of calcitonin, the therapeutic effect was obtained within the first 24 hours of treatment. In patients with incomplete results increasing the dosage did not result in a further reduction of calcemia. No hypocalcaemia was observed. This study confirms that synthetic human calcitonin has a normalizing effect on calcemia. This effect is not dose-dependent, and blood calcium levels rise again after treatment is discontinued.
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PMID:[Human calcitonin in neoplastic hypercalcemia. Results of a prospective randomized trial]. 297 78

In an attempt to analyze the pathological processes which lead to hypercalcemia in patients with multiple bone metastases, 23 advanced breast cancer patients with multiple bone metastases, three hypercalcemic patients with other malignancies and seven early breast cancer patients without any distant metastasis were studied. Of the 23 patients with advanced breast cancer, nine showed serum calcium levels higher than 10 mg/dl. In five of the nine hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer, urinary cyclic AMP excretion was lower than 4 nmol/100 ml of glomerular filtrate (GF), indicating that the secretion of parathyroid hormone was suppressed. However, urinary cyclic AMP excretion was higher than 4 nmol/100 ml of GF in the other four hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer and three hypercalcemic patients with other malignancies. In patients with higher urinary cyclic AMP excretion, fractional excretion of calcium (FECa) showed a negative correlation (r = 0.83, P less than 0.05) with urinary cyclic AMP. Parathyroid hormone immunoreactivity was not detected in any of six patients showing serum calcium levels higher than 11 mg/dl. These results suggest that in about a half of hypercalcemic patients with advanced breast cancer and multiple bone metastasis, there is a factor which increases urinary cyclic AMP and enhances calcium reabsorption in the kidney, but which is different from parathyroid hormone. This factor may facilitate retention of calcium mobilized into the circulation by bone metastases, and lead to hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Stimulation of calcium reabsorption observed in advanced breast cancer patients with hypercalcemia and multiple bone metastases. 298 61

A serially transplantable tumor line, designated CAC-8, has been developed in nude mice from a spontaneously occurring adenocarcinoma of the anal sac from a hypercalcemic dog. Nude mice with transplanted CAC-8 developed hypercalcemia (mean 16.3 +/- 0.6 mg/dl) and moderate hypophosphatemia without bone metastasis. Urinary excretion of calcium and hydroxyproline were increased 6- and 2.3-fold, respectively. Urinary excretion of cAMP was moderately increased but phosphorus excretion was not significantly altered. Serum 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol was increased significantly in tumor-bearing nude mice in proportion to the magnitude of tumor-induced hypercalcemia. Histomorphometric evaluation of lumbar vertebrae from nude mice with CAC-8 revealed decreased total and cortical bone volume, a 3.3-fold increase in bone resorption rate and a 2.5-fold increase in bone formation rate at the tissue level. The transplanted CAC-8 has maintained the histologic pattern of the original carcinoma up to the present sixth passage. Ultrastructural evaluation of transplanted tumor cells revealed 150-250-nm secretory-like granules. The granules did not stain by using an ultrastructural cytochemical (uranaffin) stain specific for neuroendocrine secretory granules. Ultrastructurally, the parathyroid glands of nude mice with CAC-8 appeared inactive with large intracytoplasmic whorl of agranular membranes. These data suggest the transplanted carcinoma secreted a humoral factor which resulted in hypercalcemia. The tumor line (CAC-8) propagated in nude mice represents an animal model of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy that shares many features with the syndrome described in human patients. Unique features of this transplanted carcinoma associated with hypercalcemia include increased serum dihydroxycholecalciferol, increased rate of bone formation as well as bone resorption, an absence of bone metastases, and evidence of parathyroid gland suppression.
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PMID:Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy in nude mouse model of a canine adenocarcinoma derived from apocrine glands of the anal sac. Biochemical, histomorphometric, and ultrastructural studies. 301 99

Treatment of malignancy-associated hypercalcemia remains unsatisfactory. We have prospectively treated 26 consecutive hypercalcemic cancer patients with intravenous (IV) aminohydroxypropylidene diphosphonate (APD). The drug was administered daily as a 15-mg two-hour IV infusion until both serum and urinary calcium had been normalized for 48 hours. Twenty-four patients were fully evaluable (eight head and neck tumors, seven breast cancers, three epidermoid tumors of the lung, and six miscellaneous neoplasms). Whereas rehydration had only inconsistent effects, APD normalized serum calcium in all patients after a mean of three daily doses: serum calcium decreased from 13.3 +/- 0.4 mg/dL (mean +/- SEM) before APD to 8.0 +/- 0.1 mg/dL at the end of treatment. Ionized calcium declined in parallel to total calcium. APD was as effective in hypercalcemia due to bone metastases as in paraneoplastic hypercalcemia. The drug was tolerated without toxicity and had a prolonged effect: serum calcium remained normal during 3+ weeks (1 + to 8 +) in 17 patients who did not receive or did not respond to antitumoral treatment. APD normalized serum calcium by inhibiting bone resorption, as evidenced by the dramatic decrease in urinary excretion of calcium and hydroxyproline. Inhibition of bone resorption was probably also responsible for the decrease in serum phosphorus from 2.9 +/- 0.2 to 2.0 +/- 0.1 mg/dL. In summary, IV APD constitutes a major advance in the treatment of malignancy-associated hypercalcemia: it is very effective, well tolerated, and has a prolonged efficacy.
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PMID:Treatment of malignancy-associated hypercalcemia with intravenous aminohydroxypropylidene diphosphonate. 301 5

Gallium, a group IIIa metal, is known to interact with hydroxyapatite as well as the cellular components of bone. In recent studies we have found gallium to be a potent inhibitor of bone resorption that is clinically effective in controlling cancer-related hypercalcemia as well as the accelerated bone resorption associated with bone metastases. To begin to elucidate gallium's mechanism of action we have examined its effects on bone mineral properties. After short-term (14 days) administration to rats, gallium nitrate produced measurable changes in bone mineral properties. Using atomic absorption spectroscopy, low levels of gallium were noted to preferentially accumulate in regions of active bone formation, 0.54 +/- .07 microgram/mg bone in the metaphyses versus 0.21 +/- .03 microgram/mg bone in the diaphyses, P less than 0.001. The bones of treated animals had increased calcium content measured spectrophotometrically. Rats injected with radiolabeled calcium during gallium treatment had greater 45-calcium content compared to control animals. By wide-angle X-ray analyses, larger and/or more perfect hydroxyapatite was observed. The combined effects of gallium on bone cell function and bone mineral may explain its clinical efficacy in blocking accelerated bone resorption.
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PMID:Gallium increases bone calcium and crystallite perfection of hydroxyapatite. 302 92

Hypercalcemia in patients with breast cancer is usually attributed to osteolytic bone metastases. Seventeen patients with biopsy-proved breast cancer and hypercalcemia were identified in a prospective, unselected manner. Biochemical and clinical evaluation included measurements of parathyroid hormone, nephrogenous cAMP, vitamin D metabolites, fasting calcium excretion, and maximal tubular phosphate reabsorption, and bone radionuclide scanning. Tumor histologic findings were also reviewed. Four of the 17 patients (23.5 percent) had no evidence of bone involvement by bone scanning or radiography. Two additional patients (a total of 35 percent) appeared to have a humoral component to their hypercalcemia as determined by the presence of elevated nephrogenous cAMP excretion. These observations suggest that humoral, tumor-derived products may play a more important role in the hypercalcemia of breast cancer than has been previously recognized.
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PMID:Hypercalcemia in breast cancer. Reassessment of the mechanism. 303 97

We report a case of severe hypocalcemia in a patient with prostate cancer and extensive metastatic bone disease. The hypocalcemia in this patient was most likely on the basis of extensive accretion of calcium into the bones. We further studied 112 patients with prostate cancer, 15 of whom were discovered to be hypocalcemic on the basis of serum total calcium measurement. Fourteen of these 15 patients had bone metastases. Serum total calcium, total protein, and albumin levels were significantly lower in patients with bone metastases (n = 61) than those without (n = 51). Hypocalcemia could be explained on the basis of hypoalbuminemia or renal failure in these patients. Plasma ionized Ca measurements were made in 47 of the total 112 patients. Only one patient with extensive bone metastases was found to be hypocalcemic on the basis of ionized calcium measurement. Therefore, apparent hypocalcemia based on total calcium measurement is common in patients with prostate cancer (14% of all and 23% of those with bone metastases), whereas true hypocalcemia based on ionized calcium determinations is unusual.
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PMID:Hypocalcemia in patients with prostate cancer. 314 22

Assessment of response of skeletal metastases to systemic therapy is currently dependent on radiological evidence of bone healing. We have performed a prospective study of additional response criteria in patients with progressive bone metastases from breast cancer. Changes in these potential markers of response were correlated with the radiological response and the time to treatment failure (TTF). Successful systemic therapy typically led to a transient increase in osteoblast activity ('flare'), a reduction in osteoclast activity and symptomatic improvement. After 1 month a greater than 10% rise in serum osteocalcin (BGP) and alkaline phosphatase bone isoenzyme (ALP-BI) and a greater than 10% fall in urinary calcium excretion were seen in 14/16 patients with radiographic evidence of bone healing (UICC partial responders). In comparison similar biochemical changes at 1 month were seen in only 4/20 patients with progressive disease (P less than 0.001). The predictive value and diagnostic efficiency (DE) of changes at 1 month in biochemical measurements and symptom score has been calculated. The combination of a greater than 10% rise in ALPBI and BGP and a greater than 10% fall in urinary calcium excretion had a DE of 89% for discriminating response from progression, 88% for response from non-response (progressing + no change patients), and 76% for TTF of greater than 6 months from TTF of less than 6 months. Serum calcium, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRP), urinary hydroxyproline excretion and bone scan changes were unhelpful in discriminating between patient groups. Independent confirmation is needed, but our results suggest there are reliable alternatives to plain radiography in the early assessment of response of bone metastases to treatment.
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PMID:Biochemical prediction of response of bone metastases to treatment. 326 66

Salmon calcitonin 100 MRCU/day or a saline placebo were given in daily injections for at least three months to 49 patients with bone metastases from breast cancer in a randomized double-blind trial. All patients were normocalcemic, and most patients had stable or regressing disease at start of trial. No improvement in general performance or bone pain was detected as measured by a visual analogue scale, the daily duration of pain or consumption of analgetic drugs. Calcitonin had no effect on disease progression as judged by bone scans and radiographs. Calcitonin therapy did not affect serum calcium, alkaline phosphatase, bone gla-protein, or the urinary excretion of calcium and hydroxyproline. Serum phosphate and magnesium decreased significantly during calcitonin treatment (p = 0.01, and 0.00005, respectively). It was concluded that salmon calcitonin in this dosage has no discernible effect on skeletal pain, general performance, bone metabolism or disease progression in patients with breast cancer metastatic to bone. A significant decrease in serum phosphate and magnesium probably indicated an effect of calcitonin on the renal excretion of these ions.
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PMID:Evaluation of salmon calcitonin treatment in bone metastases from breast cancer--a controlled trial. 328 58

Out of a retrospective series of 89 consecutive cases of squamous oesophageal carcinoma, twelve cases (13.3%) had hypercalcaemia (one of which is described in detail). Four out of the seven patients (57%) who had bone surveys had bone metastases. In hypercalcaemic patients the median survival was 17 weeks, while in normocalcaemic patients median survival was 19 weeks. The hypercalcaemia was overlooked or ignored in eleven out of the twelve cases. The high incidence of hypercalcaemia in oesophageal carcinoma may not be well recognised. Since a significant percentage of cases may not have bone metastases, the occurrence of a raised calcium does not necessarily preclude attempted curative treatment and, in addition, treatment of the hypercalcaemia may provide valuable relief of what are sometimes distressing symptoms.
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PMID:Oesophageal carcinoma and hypercalcaemia: a clinical study. 331 16


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