Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The literature on tumor distinctive markers in ovarian cancer has been reviewed. Various immunological and biochemical approaches have been attempted for the diagnosis and management of patients with ovarian cancer. The complex spectrum of antigens that can be detected in human ovarian cancer consists of several tumor-associated antigens, fetal or carcinoembryonic antigens, carcinoplacental markers, and normal tissue antigens. We have described and partially characterized two ovarian tumor-associated antigens designated as OCAA and OCAA-1, which seem to have potential for the immunodiagnosis of ovarian cancer. Several other investigators have carried out similar studies, but in general their serological characterization of these antigens has been limited. The well-defined embryonic proteins that have been examined in the ovarian cancer include carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), alpha-fetoprotein (alpha-fp), beta-oncofetal antigen (BOFA), Regan and Nagao isoenzymes and human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG). The presence of pregnancy-zone protein (PZP) has also been reported in ovarian cancer. In addition, several normal tissue components include fibrin-fibrinogen degradation products (FDP), alpha 1-globulin, and urokinase have been found associated with ovarian cancer. Both humoral antibodies and cell-mediated immune responses against tumor-associated antigens can be measured in ovarian cancer patients. In addition, serum factors, which block cellular immune reactions, have been identified. However, progress in this area has been hampered by the complexity of the antigens associated with ovarian tumors and the lack of standardized, well-characterized sources of antigens or target cells. Enzymes, especially those involved in glycoprotein biosynthesis, (eg, glycoprotein:glycosyltransferases and glycosidase) have been explored as possible early biochemical indicators of ovarian neoplasia. A serum specific deficiency of alpha-L-fucosidase has been found in patients with ovarian cancers. Of all the glycoprotein:glycosyltransferases studied, galactosyltransferase has been found to be the best enzyme marker for ovarian
adenocarcinoma
. The determination of serum levels of this enzyme reflected the clinical status of the patient with respect of
tumor progression
as well as tumor burden. Recently, assay of a phosphodiesterase, which specifically hydrolyzes cytidine 5'-monophospho-N-acetylneuraminic acid, has been found promising in the detection and management of patients with ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:Tumor markers for ovarian cancer. 9 53
Tumors of the rat large intestine induced by subcutaneous injection of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine were studied by the method of electron microscopy.
Adenocarcinomas
retained histiotypical differentiation and at the same time consisted mostly of cells with a low rate of differentiation. Just on the contrary, in mucous and signet-ring cell carcinomas the picture of an advanced cell differentiation was observed in a complete loss of organogeny. The greatest malignancy of neoplasms (signet-ring carcinoma), which cells are characterized by a high degree of cytological differentiation, is a manifestation of independence of
tumor progression
signs.
...
PMID:[Ultrastructural characteristics of experimental tumors of the intestine]. 17 4
The efficacy of combined high-dose etoposide with standard dose cisplatin was evaluated in patients who had refractory lung cancer after standard chemotherapy. Each patient was given etoposide at 500 mg/m2/day on day 1 to 3 continuously (total dose 1,500 mg/m2) and cisplatin at 80 mg/m2 on day 1. Fifteen patients (7
adenocarcinoma
, 5 small cell lung cancer, 2 squamous cell lung cancer and 1 sarcoma, which latter was difficult to distinguish from giant cell carcinoma) were entered in this study. The overall response was 41.7% (5 of 12); five partial response, 6 no change, and 1 progressive disease. Three treatment-related deaths were observed; one resulted from sepsis and two from respiratory failure because of
tumor progression
. All of the patients developed severe myelosuppression; the mean nadir white blood cell count was 400, and the mean nadir platelet count was 24,000 in 28 evaluable courses. The range of maximum concentration of etoposide determined by HPLC was from 17.4 to 39.1 micrograms/ml. These results suggest that high-dose etoposide combined with a standard dose of cisplatin is effective against refractory lung cancer.
...
PMID:[Pilot phase II trial of high-dose etoposide combined with cisplatin in the treatment of refractory lung cancer]. 131 97
In the human prostate, a low affinity (p75) nerve growth factor (NGF) receptor (NGF-R) localizes to the epithelia while a NGF-like protein localizes to the stroma. This NGF-like ligand, derived from prostate stromal cell cultures, has been shown to participate in paracrine mediated growth of a human tumor epithelial cell line (TSU-prl) in vitro. In order to investigate the role of the NGF-R in neoplastic growth we have examined the expression of the NGF-R in normal prostate tissues, benign prostatic hyperplasia tissues,
adenocarcinoma
tissues, and four metastatic tumor cell lines of the human prostate. In primary epithelial cell cultures of normal human prostate the p75 NGF-R was localized by immunocytochemistry to cytoplasmic vesicles. Furthermore, Western blot analysis of the NGF-R in subcellular fractions of normal prostate tissue identified an M(r) 75,000 immunoreactive protein in the microsomal fraction under nonreducing conditions of sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. However, microsomal preparations of five prostatic adenocarcinoma and five benign prostatic hyperplasia specimens showed varying immunoreactivity among samples, all of which expressed less of the p75 NGF-R than the normal tissue. Interestingly, microsomal preparations of the human prostatic epithelial cell lines, TSU-prl, DU-145, PC-3, and LNCaP did not show NGF-R expression by immunoblot analysis. Hence, expression of the p75 NGF-R in normal prostate tissue, partial loss of NGF-R expression in benign and malignant prostate tissue, and complete loss of NGF-R expression in the four metastatic tumor cell lines, suggests an inverse association of p75 NGF-R expression with the
neoplastic progression
of the human prostate.
...
PMID:Reduced expression of the low affinity nerve growth factor receptor in benign and malignant human prostate tissue and loss of expression in four human metastatic prostate tumor cell lines. 138 43
Malignant salivary gland neoplasms in children are rare, most common being mucoepidermoid carcinoma, adenoid cystic carcinoma, acinic cell carcinoma and
adenocarcinoma
. Most germ-cell neoplasms of head and neck in children are teratomas. The authors report a case of endodermal sinus tumor (EST) of the parotid gland in a 2-year-old girl, which recurred after chemotherapy. The role of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) serum level as a helpful marker in differential diagnosis and in evaluating
tumor progression
is underlined.
...
PMID:Endodermal sinus (yolk sac) tumor of the parotid gland: a case report. 139 16
150 endoscopically removed colorectal adenomas are quantitatively studied. In 90 cases dysplastic glands constituted the entire lesion (30 mild, 30 moderate, 30 severe); in 60 cases foci of
adenocarcinoma
were present (30 intramucosal, 30 submucosal). In each case the area, the perimeter and the integrated optical density of 100 nuclei were measured from Feulgen-stained paraffin sections. The results show a continuous
neoplastic progression
in the trends of the morphometric parameters as well as in the ploidy pattern. The stepwise discriminant analysis defined the morphometric features of the atypical nuclei, which were present in small numbers also in mild dysplasia; they progressively increased in number, reaching the maximum in submucosal carcinoma.
...
PMID:Quantitative study of the precancerous and malignant lesions in colorectal adenomas. 140 89
Flow cytometry was used to examine the spatial distribution of nuclear DNA content in Barrett's mucosa, in one patient with high grade dysplasia and in 6 patients with Barrett's
adenocarcinoma
. All tumors were aneuploid. Each
adenocarcinoma
but the most advanced seemed to arise from a single clone of aneuploid or near-tetraploid cells which was found in all biopsy specimens taken from the tumor. Multiple aneuploid populations of cells were seen in the larger tumors. Eight clones were individualized in the most advanced case of cancer. In all patients with carcinoma, the mucosa surrounding the tumor was aneuploid. Some areas were characterized by the same DNA index as in the tumor, others contained distinct aneuploid cell populations. The spatial distributions of aneuploid clones and dysplastic areas were not perfectly superimposed. These data suggest that
neoplastic progression
in Barrett's esophagus is associated with genomic instability preceding the development of malignancy. Clonal heterogeneity in Barrett's
adenocarcinoma
is more marked when compared to other tumors and suggests a majoration of genomic instability during
tumor progression
.
...
PMID:[Demonstration of clonal heterogeneity in adenocarcinomas on Barrett's esophagus by flow cytometric study of cellular DNA content]. 152 15
To determine whether or not flow-cytometric evidence of aneuploidy and increased G2/tetraploid fractions predispose to
neoplastic progression
in Barrett's esophagus, 62 patients with Barrett's esophagus were evaluated prospectively for a mean interval of 34 months. Nine of 13 patients who showed aneuploid or increased G2/tetraploid populations in their initial flow-cytometric analysis developed high-grade dysplasia or
adenocarcinoma
during follow-up; none of the 49 patients without these abnormalities progressed to high-grade dysplasia or cancer (P less than 0.0001). Neoplastic progression was characterized by progressive flow-cytometric and histological abnormalities. Patients who progressed to high-grade dysplasia and carcinoma frequently developed multiple aneuploid populations of cells that were detectable flow-cytometrically. Similarly, patients appeared to progress through a phenotypic sequence that could be recognized histologically by the successive appearance of Barrett's metaplasia negative for dysplasia, abnormalities in the indefinite/low-grade dysplasia range, high-grade dysplasia, and eventually
adenocarcinoma
. These and prior results suggest that
neoplastic progression
in Barrett's esophagus occurs in a subset of patients who have an acquired genomic instability that generates abnormal clones of cells, some of which have aneuploid or increased G2/tetraploid DNA contents. With continued genomic instability, multiple aneuploid subclones may evolve, one of which may ultimately acquire the ability to invade and become an early carcinoma. The combination of histology and flow cytometry can be used to identify a subset of patients with Barrett's esophagus who merit more frequent endoscopic surveillance for the early detection of high-grade dysplasia or carcinoma.
...
PMID:Flow-cytometric and histological progression to malignancy in Barrett's esophagus: prospective endoscopic surveillance of a cohort. 155 52
Barrett's esophagus is a condition in which the normal stratified squamous epithelium is replaced by metaplastic columnar epithelium that predisposes to the development of esophageal
adenocarcinoma
. Neoplastic progression in Barrett's esophagus occurs by a multistep process associated with genomic instability and the development of aneuploid cell populations. p53 protein overexpression and allelic deletions on chromosome 17p have been shown to be present in some Barrett's adenocarcinomas, but the stage in
neoplastic progression
at which p53 protein overexpression develops has not been investigated. To determine the stages in
neoplastic progression
at which p53 protein overexpression could be detected, biopsy specimens from patients with Barrett's esophagus at all stages of histological progression from Barrett's metaplasia negative for dysplasia to esophageal
adenocarcinoma
were investigated using a multiparameter flow-cytometric assay. p53 protein overexpression was found in 1 of 21 patients (5%) with Barrett's metaplasia negative for dysplasia, 2 of 13 patients (15%) with Barrett's metaplasia with abnormalities in the indefinite/low-grade dysplasia range, 5 of 11 patients (45%) with high-grade dysplasia, and 8 of 15 patients (53%) with Barrett's
adenocarcinoma
(P less than 0.01). p53 protein overexpression was found in 9% of patients with Barrett's esophagus who had neither high-grade dysplasia nor
adenocarcinoma
. Whether or not patients whose biopsy specimens show p53 protein overexpression are at increased risk for progression to
adenocarcinoma
can be determined by prospective endoscopic surveillance.
...
PMID:Evaluation of p53 protein expression in Barrett's esophagus by two-parameter flow cytometry. 155 52
Quantitative evaluation of the levels of endogenous gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) in the extracts of tumor, peritumoral and normal colorectal tissues resected surgically from 43 patients with colorectal
adenocarcinoma
was carried out using solid-phase, sandwich radioimmunoassay (RIA). The levels of both IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha detected in the tumor tissues were higher than those in the peritumoral and normal tissues obtained from each patient. A significant negative correlation was observed between the levels of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha in each tumor tissue. The decrease of endogenous IFN-gamma in the tumors correlated with the advance of histopathological stages. Thirty seven patients were classified into three types according to the endogenous IFN-gamma distribution (intratumoral dominant type, peritumoral dominant type and nonreactive type). There was no significant difference concerning to the tumor diameters among them. However, the mean stage of the intratumoral dominant type was significantly earlier than that of the nonreactive types. On the other hand, the increase of endogenous TNF-alpha correlated with the maximum diameter of primary tumors. The production of endogenous TNF-alpha was localized in the tumor tissues, and the significant elevation of endogenous TNF-alpha was not observed in the peritumoral tissues. The immunohistochemical staining of IFN-gamma- and TNF-alpha-producing cells in tumor tissues represented that IFN-gamma was mainly produced by CD4+CD8-CD11c- lymphocytes and that TNF-alpha was mainly produced by CD4-CD8-CD11c+ cells with macrophage-like morphology. These results suggest that CD4+ lymphocytes producing IFN-gamma might play an important role in the anti-tumor response against
cancer progression
in human colorectal
adenocarcinoma
.
...
PMID:[Detection of endogenous IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha in tumor-infiltrating mononuclear cells of human colorectal cancer]. 155 60
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>