Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The differential diagnosis between Helicobacter pylori (H pylori-associated chronic gastritis and low-grade B-cell gastric lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) and the assessment of endoscopic biopsy specimens after treatment of lymphoma can be problematic. Although immunocytochemistry can be used to identify clonal B-cell populations, which are characteristic of MALT lymphoma, its application to small biopsy specimens and the subsequent interpretation can be difficult. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) can detect clonal B-cell populations by analysis of the Ig heavy chain gene in routinely fixed paraffin-embedded material and might provide a useful tool in the assessment of these specimens. We have investigated the value of histology and PCR in the diagnosis of lymphoma and its followup in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded gastric endoscopy biopsy specimens from 69 sequential patients selected on the basis of a dense mucosal lymphoid infiltrate associated with H pylori infection. Histologic evidence of MALT lymphoma was identified in 13 cases, 9 of which showed PCR-detected monoclonality. In 12 of 13 cases, H pylori was eradicated, and in 11 of 12 cases, histologic regression of the lymphoma followed. PCR evidence of monoclonality disappeared in 6 of 9 originally monoclonal cases. This was synchronous with histologic remission in 1 case, but lagged in the remaining 5 cases by up to 28 months. Two of the 3 of the 9 cases originally monoclonal by PCR that have not shown molecular regression have monoclonal-amplified products 17 and 24 months after negative histology. In 3 cases, the histology of the biopsies was considered indeterminate or discordant. In 1 of these cases, the histologic features were obscured by crush artefact. In a second case, there was molecular evidence of monoclonality in the absence of histologic features suggestive of lymphoma; this persisted after H pylori eradication. An additional single case originally diagnosed as reactive developed a PCR detectable clonal population 29 months after original evaluation in the absence of histologic features of lymphoma but in the presence of persistent H pylori infection. These findings suggest that the histologic assessment of gastric biopsies remains the method of choice for the diagnosis of lymphoma in gastric endoscopic biopsies with a dense mucosal lymphoid infiltrate. PCR provides a useful technique to support the diagnosis if clonal amplification products are found. The significance of PCR detected clonality in the absence of histologic evidence of lymphoma in uncertain but may represent a stage of tumor progression/regression when the clonal population is insufficient to be detected by conventional histology. This is supported by the evidence that PCR-detectable monoclonality can persist after treatment and the disappearance of histologically detectable lymphoma.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and posttreatment follow-up of Helicobacter pylori-positive gastric lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue: histology, polymerase chain reaction, or both? 860 13

The accumulation of wild-type p53 protein results in two pathways, cell cycle G1 arrest by p21WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 and apoptosis inhibited by bcl2, which together carry out the tumor suppressor function. Since genetic alterations of p53 are frequently observed in gastric cancers, the expression of p21 and bcl2 may be altered in gastric carcinogenesis. We therefore analyzed normal mucosa, nondysplastic lesions, hyperplastic polyps, adenomas and carcinomas of the human stomach using immuno-histochemistry, polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism and DNA sequencing. In normal gastric mucosa, the expression of p21, bcl2 and p53 was topographically restricted: a) p21 expression was limited to foveolar epithelial cells; b) bcl2 and p53 expression was confined to only a few regenerative epithelial cells of the mucous neck region. In chronic gastritis or intestinal metaplasia, topographic expression became more obvious. This topographic expression was altered in hyperplastic polyps and adenomas. Hyper-plastic polyp showed an increased p21 and p53 expression with no bcl2 expression. Where as bcl2 expression increased and extended up parabasal and superficial dysplastic epithelium, p21 expression increased and was limited to surface dysplastic epithelium. Weak p53 expression was in full thickness of dysplastic epithelium. p21 and bcl2 expression in adenoma was higher than in intestinal type of carcinoma. In carcinomas, this topography was abrogated, but p53 mutation (36%) was present. There was no relationship between p53, p21 and bcl2 expression. As a result, in normal gastric epithelial cells, there was a precisely ordered topographic pattern of p21, bcl2 and wild-type p53 expression that becomes disordered during neoplasia. These results suggest that altered cell cycle and apoptosis control by wild-type p53 and its mediators appears to be an early event in gastric carcinogenesis that may facilitate tumor progression.
...
PMID:Altered topographic expression of p21WAF1/CIP1/SDI1, bcl2 and p53 during gastric carcinogenesis. 965 43

Our purpose was to evaluate the clinical, histologic, and histochemical staining characteristics of intestinal metaplasia (IM) at an endoscopically normal-appearing esophagogastric junction (IM-EGJ) compared with IM in a columnar-lined esophagus (IM-CLE). A prospective study included 253 patients referred for elective upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Biopsy specimens were obtained from 2 cm above and immediately distal to the squamocolumnar junction, the gastric corpus, and the antrum. Any red mucosa above the EGJ was sampled. IM-CLE (prevalence, 5.5%) typically occurred in white male smokers with a long history of reflux symptoms. IM-EGJ (prevalence, 9.1%) was associated with corpus and antrum gastritis and with IM at these sites. IM-CLE usually (13/14 [93%]) was the incomplete type IM, whereas only 12 (52%) of 23 patients in the IM-EGJ group had incomplete IM. IM-EGJ and IM-CLE should be considered as separate entities. Further research is needed to evaluate whether neoplastic progression of IM-EGJ is related to its mucin profile.
...
PMID:Intestinal metaplasia of the esophagus or esophagogastric junction: evidence of distinct clinical, pathologic, and histochemical staining features. 1179 90

Gastric cancer develops through the accumulation of multiple genetic lesions that involve oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes and DNA mismatch repair genes. Lauren's classification of gastric carcinoma does not correlate with cellular phenotypes expressed by neoplastic cells and gastric and intestinal cell differentiation markers are widely expressed in both types (intestinal and diffuse) of gastric carcinoma. In contrast, the study of the correlation between morphologic events and genetic alterations, which come about in the cancerogenetic process, seems to indicate the existence of distinct cancerogenetic pathways for the intestinal (or glandular) and diffuse type carcinoma, both originating from a HP-positive gastritis. In particular there seem to be three different profiles of cancerogenesis: 1) p53 mutations which accompany the onset of dysplasia and intestinal-type carcinoma; 2) DNA repair mechanism alterations conditioning microsatellite instability, seem mutually exclusive with regards to p53 mutations. Microsatellite instability correlates with antrally located intestinal-type carcinoma, with little metastatic tendency and a better prognosis; microsatellite instability frequently involves the TGF beta RII, IGF II R genes or the BAX proapoptotic gene, in as much as these contain microsatellite sequences; 3) alterations of E-cadherin, both with regards to mutations and abnormal expression. These lead to junctional and cell polarity loss and are primarily associated with diffuse type carcinoma, which is characterized by poorly cohesive neoplastic cells. Some tumors, initially arising as intestinal-type (glandular structure), acquire a mixed histotype during neoplastic progression, in which both the typical alterations of the intestinal cancerogenesis (p53, microsatellite instability) and those of the diffuse carcinoma (E-cadherin) coexist. The identification of a mixed histotype could have importance both in epidemiologic, pathogenetic and prognostic terms.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of gastric carcinoma: interactions between genetic alterations, cellular phenotype and cancer histotype. 1181 65

Gastric adenomas are neoplastic growths characterized by localized, polypoid proliferations of dysplastic epithelium. They frequently arise in stomachs with a background of mucosal atrophy and intestinal metaplasia, and a higher risk of adenocarcinoma elsewhere in the stomach has been reported in patients with gastric adenomas. Additionally, some gastric adenomas themselves demonstrate neoplastic progression to infiltrating adenocarcinoma. However, previous studies have not comprehensively evaluated the background gastric mucosa and risk of adenocarcinoma, particularly in relation to the histologic classification of adenomas as either intestinal-type or gastric-type. We studied 61 gastric adenomas from 51 patients between 1985 and 2001. The adenomas were classified as intestinal-type (containing at least focal goblet cells and/or Paneth cells), gastric-type (lined entirely by gastric mucin cells on PAS/alcian blue stain), or indeterminate. We evaluated the histologic features of both the adenomas (location, multiplicity, degree of dysplasia, presence of adenocarcinoma within the polyp) and the surrounding gastric mucosa (presence of gastritis, intestinal metaplasia, and adenocarcinoma). Gastric adenomas were distributed equally throughout the stomach, were most frequently solitary (82%), and contained adenocarcinoma in nine cases (14.8%). There were 34 intestinal-type adenomas (56%) in 31 patients, 25 gastric-type adenomas (41%) in 18 patients (including 10 patients with familial adenomatous polyposis), and 2 of indeterminate type (3%). Intestinal-type adenomas were significantly more likely than gastric-type adenomas to show high-grade dysplasia (p <0.0001), adenocarcinoma within the polyp (p = 0.016), intestinal metaplasia in the surrounding stomach (p <0.000001), and gastritis (p = 0.002). Patients with intestinal-type adenomas were also more likely to have separate adenocarcinomas (five cases vs 0 cases), although this did not reach statistical significance. Gastric adenomas are rarely truly "sporadic" lesions. In any individual patient complete removal of the adenoma should be performed, and thorough biopsy of the surrounding gastric mucosa is essential to understand the clinicopathologic context of the adenoma.
...
PMID:Gastric adenomas: intestinal-type and gastric-type adenomas differ in the risk of adenocarcinoma and presence of background mucosal pathology. 1236 42

alpha1,4-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (alpha4GnT) is a glycosyltransferase that forms a unique glycan, GlcNAcalpha1-->4Galbeta-->R, specifically present in gastric gland mucous cell-type mucin. Recently, we molecularly cloned human alpha4GnT and showed that alpha4GnT is expressed in the mucous cells that secrete this particular mucin. In the present study, we first demonstrated that alpha4GnT was frequently expressed in gastric cancer cells but not in peripheral blood cells using immunohistochemistry. To detect gastric cancer cells circulating in the peripheral blood of gastric cancer patients, we quantitatively analyzed the expression level of alpha4GnT mRNA in the mononuclear cell fraction of peripheral blood using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. The transcripts of alpha4GnT were detected in the mononuclear cell fraction isolated from 62.2% of 37 gastric cancer patients but not from any of 23 healthy individuals. Significant correlation was found in the expression levels of alpha4GnT mRNA in peripheral blood and alpha4GnT protein in gastric cancer cells. Surprisingly, alpha4GnT mRNA was detectable in 80% of five patients with an early stage of gastric cancer when the cancer cells were limited to the gastric mucosa, and the expression levels of alpha4GnT mRNA were increased in association with tumor progression. In three patients with gastric cancer, during postsurgical follow-up, the expression levels of alpha4GnT mRNA were decreased after surgical removal of gastric cancer. However, significant amounts of the alpha4GnT transcripts were again detected in two patients, who eventually developed to the recurrence of gastric cancer. Although alpha4GnT was detected in 33.3% of nine patients with Helicobacter pylori-infected chronic active gastritis as well as all of four patients with peptic ulcer, the mean expression level of alpha4GnT mRNA in these benign disorders was lower than that in gastric cancer. These results altogether indicate that the quantitative analysis of alpha4GnT mRNA expressed in the peripheral blood is useful for the detection and, possibly, monitoring of gastric cancer.
...
PMID:Usefulness of the real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assay targeted to alpha1,4-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase for the detection of gastric cancer. 1259 34

Rebamipide accelerates healing of gastric ulcers and gastritis but its actions on gastric cancer are not known. Survivin, an anti-apoptosis protein, is overexpressed in stem, progenitor, and cancer cells. In gastric cancer, increased and sustained survivin expression provides survival advantage and facilitates tumor progression and resistance to anti-cancer drugs. Aurora-B kinase is essential for chromosome alignment and mitosis progression but surprisingly its role in gastric cancer has not been explored. We examined in human gastric cancer AGS cells: (1) survivin expression, (2) localization of survivin and Aurora-B, (3) cell proliferation, and (4) effects of specific survivin siRNA and/or rebamipide (free radical scavenging drug) on survivin and Aurora-B expression and cell proliferation. Survivin and Aurora-B are strongly expressed in human AGS gastric cancer cells and co-localize during mitosis. Survivin siRNA significantly reduces AGS cell viability. Rebamipide significantly downregulates in AGS cell survivin expression, its association with Aurora-B and cell proliferation. Rebamipide-induced downregulation of survivin is at the transcription level and does not involve ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.
...
PMID:Rebamipide inhibits gastric cancer growth by targeting survivin and Aurora-B. 1599 41

Helicobacter pylori is responsible for most human stomach cancers. Gastric cancer also is overrepresented in populations consuming high-salt diets. Attempts to test the hypothesis that high salt promotes H. pylori carcinogenesis have been hindered by the lack of a wild-type mouse model. Based on pilot observations of unexpectedly early gastric adenocarcinoma in C57BL/6 x 129S6/SvEv (B6129) mice infected with Helicobacter felis, we conducted a study to characterize H. pylori infection in these mice and to determine whether high salt promotes tumorigenesis. Male and female mice were gavaged with H. pylori Sydney strain-1 or vehicle only and divided into four groups based on infection status and maintenance on a basal (0.25%) or high (7.5%) salt diet. In uninfected mice, the high-salt diet enhanced proliferation and marginally increased parietal cell mucous metaplasia with oxyntic atrophy. Lesions in H. pylori infected mice without regard to diet or gender were of equivalent severity and characterized by progressive gastritis, oxyntic atrophy, hyperplasia, intestinal metaplasia, and dysplasia. Infected mice on the high-salt diet exhibited a shift in antimicrobial humoral immunity from a Th1 to a Th2 pattern, accompanied by significantly higher colonization and a qualitative increase in infiltrating eosinophils. No mice developed anti-parietal cell antibodies suggestive of autoimmune gastritis. At 15 months of age infected mice in both dietary cohorts exhibited high-grade dysplasia consistent with gastric intraepithelial neoplasia. In summary, we report for the first time H. pylori-induced gastric intraepithelial neoplasia in a wild-type mouse model and show no additive effect of high-salt ingestion on tumor progression.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori but not high salt induces gastric intraepithelial neoplasia in B6129 mice. 1632 15

Pathogenic mechanisms associated with Helicobacter pylori infection enhance susceptibility of the gastric epithelium to carcinogenic conversion. We have characterized the gene expression profiles of gastric biopsies from 69 French Caucasian patients, of which 43 (62%) were infected with H. pylori. The bacterium was detected in 27 of the 42 antral biopsies examined and in 16 of the 27 fundic biopsies. Infected biopsies were selected for the presence of chronic active gastritis, in absence of metaplasia and dysplasia of the gastric mucosa. Infected antral and fundic biopsies exhibited distinct transcriptional responses. Altered responses were linked with: (1) the extent of polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration, (2) bacterial density, and (3) the presence of the virulence factors vacA, babA2, and cagA. Robust modulation of transcripts associated with Toll-like receptors, signal transduction, the immune response, apoptosis, and the cell cycle was consistent with expected responses to Gram-negative bacterial infection. Altered expression of interferon-regulated genes (IFITM1, IRF4, STAT6), indicative of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) II-mediated and Th1-specific responses, as well as altered expression of GATA6, have previously been described in precancerous states. Upregulation of genes abundantly expressed in cancer tissues (UBD, CXCL13, LY96, MAPK8, MMP7, RANKL, CCL18) or in stem cells (IFITM1 and WFDC2) may reveal a molecular switch towards a premalignant state in infected tissues. Tissue microarray analysis of a large number of biopsies, which were either positive or negative for the cag-A virulence factor, when compared to each other and to noninfected controls, confirmed observed gene alterations at the protein level, for eight key transcripts. This study provides 'proof-of-principle' data for identifying molecular mechanisms driving H. pylori-associated carcinogenesis before morphological evidence of changes along the neoplastic progression pathway.
...
PMID:Gene expression profiling in human gastric mucosa infected with Helicobacter pylori. 1764 99

Intestinal type gastric cancer is a significant cause of mortality, therefore a better understanding of its molecular basis is required. We assessed if either aneuploidy or activity of the oncogenic transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB), increased incrementally during pre-malignant gastric histological progression and also if they correlated with each other in patient samples, as they are both induced by oxygen free radicals. In a prospective study of 54 (aneuploidy) and 59 (NF-kappaB) consecutive patients, aneuploidy was assessed by interphase fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) for chromosome 1. NF-kappaB was assessed by expression of interleukin-8 (IL-8), and in a subset, by immunohistochemistry (IHC) for active p65. Aneuploidy levels increased incrementally across the histological series. 2.76% of cells with normal histology (95% CI, 2.14-3.38%) showed background levels of aneuploidy, this increased to averages of 3.78% (95% CI, 3.21-4.35%), 5.89% (95% CI, 3.72-8.06%) and 7.29% (95% CI, 4.73-9.85%) of cells from patients with gastritis, Helicobacter pylori positive gastritis and atrophy/intestinal metaplasia (IM) respectively. IL-8 expression was only increased in patients with current H. pylori infection. NF-kappaB analysis showed some increased p65 activity in inflamed tissues. IL-8 expression and aneuploidy level were not linked in individual patients. Aneuploidy levels increased incrementally during histological progression; were significantly elevated at very early stages of neoplastic progression and could well be linked to cancer development and used to assess cancer risk. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced in early gastric cancer are presumably responsible for the stepwise accumulation of this particular mutation, i.e. aneuploidy. Hence, aneuploidy measured by fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) coupled to brush cytology, would be worthy of consideration as a predictive marker in gastric cancer and could be clinically useful in pre-malignant disease to stratify patients by their cancer risk.
...
PMID:Aneuploidy involving chromosome 1 may be an early predictive marker of intestinal type gastric cancer. 1948 Nov 1


1 2 3 Next >>