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)

Signet ring cell carcinomas of the stomach are thought to arise from the proper gastric mucosa without intestinal metaplasia. It was recently reported that intestinal phenotypes appear along with tumor progression. In this study, we performed several experiments to reconsider the significance of this intestinalization in the growth of signet ring cell carcinoma. We applied mucin histochemistry with monoclonal antibodies MUC2 (Ccp58) and M1 (45M1), and paradoxical concanavalin A staining for class III mucin [PCS(III)] reaction to 29 intramucosal and 25 deeply invasive carcinomas of this type and correlated the phenotypic expression with the size of the mucosal spread and the depth of tumor invasion. It was found that the larger the size of the mucosal lesion, the more frequently the intestinal phenotypes were demonstrated. There was no significant increase in the expression of the intestinal phenotype as the tumor invaded the deeper part of the mucosa or as the intestinal metaplasia increased in the background mucosa. The intestinal expression appeared to be suppressed in the earlier phase of deep invasion. In the mucosal part of the tumor, the intestinal phenotype was often expressed regionally and incompletely, coexisting with gastric phenotypes at the cellular and the tissue levels. These findings indicate that the expression of the intestinal phenotype is a time-dependent and unstable phenomenon probably based on the accumulation of genetic changes and plays a neutral role in progression of signet ring cell carcinomas.
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PMID:Time-dependent expression of intestinal phenotype in signet ring cell carcinomas of the human stomach. 1121 35

A 71-year-old man complained of dyspnea and general fatigue. His blood tests showed severe renal dysfunction. Computed tomographic scan, bone scintigram, and cystoscopy revealed primary signet ring cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder with multiple bone metastases (cT2N0M1). As the general condition of the patient was poor, nephrostomy was performed. He died one month after the diagnosis due to cancer progression. The prognosis of signet ring cell carcinoma of the bladder is poor because many cases presented at an advanced stage. Fifty cases of signet ring cell carcinoma in the urinary bladder reported in Japan are reviewed.
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PMID:[Primary signet ring cell carcinoma of the bladder: a case report]. 1577 66

Mucinous colorectal cancer with signet ring cell aspects is a rare form of adenocarcinoma representing about 2-5% of large bowel neoplasms. The tumor frequently presents with late-stage or peritoneal spreading. It can often affect young patients and diffusely infiltrate through all layers of the intestinal wall. Local recurrence and distant metastases are common in spite of surgical operation and adjuvant treatment, conditioning a poor prognosis. At the present, early diagnosis and complete resection are the most important approaches to improve the outcome. In our report we describe a case of a 41-yr-old patient with very aggressive untreated metastatic colorectal signet ring cell carcinoma. The fulminant tumor progression was really unexpected and misled every possible medical interpretation, leading to rapid worsening of the patient's clinical conditions and no chance for chemotherapy treatment. The tumor mimicked the picture observed in the acute leukemia, developing diffuse infiltration in all serosal membranes, liver, lung, kidneys, multiple lymph nodes, and meninges, as revealed by the post-mortem medical report.
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PMID:Multiorganic dissemination of a colorectal signet ring cell carcinoma with fulminant clinical course. 1729 81

Characteristics of recurrence and metastatic development of signet ring cell carcinoma of the stomach were studied in 59 cases after combined and surgical treatment. Peritoneal dissemination appeared to be the most frequent pattern of tumor progression. It accounted for 55% of all relapses and occurred in 27% of patients even without extension through serous membrane (pT2). Metastasizing through the lymphatic viae was fairly frequent mostly in cases of peritoneal carcinomatosis while blood flow-related dissemination was not. Subtotal resection in patients with early-stage signet ring cell carcinoma (pT1) was justified because local recurrences are extremely rare in that pathology. Since (pT2-4) stump relapse is fairly frequent (14-16%), the operation of choice was gastrectomy, whatever site of tumor. Regional metastasis recurrence was 20% among patients with relapsing tumor. It usually co-occurred with distant metastases and, therefore, was less clinically significant. However, when concomitant with local recurrence, it ruled out radical treatment. Preoperative radiotherapy was followed by a significant drop in regional metastasis recurrence rate (4.5 and 13.3%, p = 0.04).
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PMID:[Regularities of relapse and metastasis of signet ring cell carcinoma of the stomach following combined and surgical treatment]. 1815 17