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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (tumor progression)
40,807 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumors of thyroid follicular cells provide a very interesting model to understand the development of human cancer. It is becoming apparent that distinct molecular events are associated with specific stages in a multistep tumorigenic process with good genotype/ phenotype correlation. For instance, mutations of the gsp and thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor genes are associated with benign hyperfunctioning thyroid nodules and adenomas while alterations of other specific genes, such as oncogenic tyrosine kinase alterations (RET/PTC, TRK) in papillary carcinoma and the newly discovered PAX8/peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma rearrangement, are distinctive features of cancer. Although activating RAS mutations occur at all stages of thyroid tumorigenesis, evidence is accumulating that they may also play an important role in tumor progression, a role that is well documented for p53. Environmental factors (iodine deficiency, ionizing radiations) have been shown to play a crucial role in promoting the development of thyroid cancer, influencing both its genotypic and phenotypic features. It is possible that the follicular thyroid cell has unique ways to respond to DNA damage. Similarly to leukemia or sarcomas (and unlike most epithelial cancers), numerous specific rearrangements are being discovered in thyroid cancer suggesting preferential activation of DNA repair instead of cell death programs after environmentally induced genetic alterations.
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PMID:Molecular pathobiology of thyroid neoplasms. 1266 46

We describe a new human tumor xenotransplant animal model that is highly efficient for engraftment, does not need host conditioning and is suitable for in vivo studies of human tumors. Pieces of 61 freshly operated primary breast tumors were implanted into 172 irradiated and 228 nonconditioned NOD/Scid mice. A high mortality was observed in irradiated but not in nonconditioned recipients. More than 90% of analyzed implanted breast cancer specimens engrafted in the NOD/Scid mice irrespective of pretreatment. The tumors were vascularized within 3 days of implantation and maintained original histomorphology as well as expression patterns of tumor markers (cytokeratin and MUC1) and cytokines (tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-4 (IL-4) and IL-10) released by adjacent stromal cells. A majority of tumors grew slowly, locally infiltrating host tissue, whereas some grew aggressively, developing large, fatal tumor masses and metastases within regional lymph nodes. Tumor progression in mice correlated with stage, grade, proliferation index and hormone receptor status of primary tumors. The reproducible growth behavior and preservation of characteristic features suggest that this new xenotransplant model is relevant and can be recommended for testing new anticancer therapies.
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PMID:Efficient engraftment of human primary breast cancer transplants in nonconditioned NOD/Scid mice. 1271 33

In breast cancer, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a prognostic factor, but the relationship of VEGF mRNA levels with various parameters or tumor progression is unclear. VEGF mRNA levels were measured in 48 cases of invasive ductal carcinoma by using laser capture microdissection and quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The mean VEGF mRNA levels were compared among different histological types and grades in 41 and 29 samples of invasive and intraductal components, respectively. VEGF mRNA levels were always higher in cancerous cells than in non-cancerous cells, but mean VEGF mRNA levels were not significantly different between invasive component (3.24 +/- 3.18-fold the value of non-cancerous tissue) and intraductal component (4.14 +/- 4.43-fold). They were higher in papillotubular type than in other types, and higher in grade 2 carcinomas than in grade 3 carcinomas of invasive component, and higher in comedo type than in other types of intraductal component. Mean VEGF mRNA levels were higher in the VEGF-immunopositive group than in the VEGF-immunonegative group. There was no correlation between VEGF mRNA levels and tumor size, nodal status, or hormone receptor status. VEGF expression may play an important role in the development of both invasive and intraductal carcinoma components, especially those carcinoma components of less aggressive histological features.
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PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor mRNA levels quantified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction in microdissected breast carcinoma tissues are correlated with histological type and grade of both invasive and intraductal components. 1587 23

The chemokine receptor CXCR4 is an important factor in the migration, invasiveness, metastasis and proliferation of breast cancer cells. We have retrospectively analyzed the levels of expression of CXCR4 in a large cohort of breast cancers and pre-invasive breast samples linked to clinical data. A total of 1808 invasive breast carcinomas and 214 pre-invasive breast samples could be analyzed in correlation with basic clinico-pathological data such as hormone receptor status, HER2 status and tumor grade. The majority of breast cancers expressed either nuclear or cytoplasmic staining or both. CXCR4 cytoplasmic expression was associated with parameters of tumor aggressivity (tumor grade and lymph node status) and had prognostic value (age-adjusted hazard ratio=1.73; Confidence Interval: 1.07-2.77) with respect to disease-specific survival. CXCR4 positivity in the cytoplasm but not the nucleus was associated with HER2 expression and amplification as well as with hormone receptor negativity (both ER and PR). The percentage of nuclear staining increased from normal breast tissue (20%) to ductal carcinoma-in-situ DCIS (43%) to invasive cancer (67%) while CXCR4 was expressed in the cytoplasm of 67% of (DCIS) cases (double that in normal breast samples), suggesting an important role in breast tumor progression. The CXCR4 receptor is expressed in many breast cancers, justifying its development as a therapeutic target in breast cancer patients. Its cytoplasmic expression is associated with breast tumor progression, suggesting potential value as a diagnostic marker.
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PMID:The role of CXCR4 receptor expression in breast cancer: a large tissue microarray study. 1634 16

Biological changes in breast cancers during tumor progression can affect therapeutic parameters, such as hormone receptors. We studied a series of primary tumors and the matching recurrent lesions to analyze the frequency of this phenomenon and the impact on disease-free interval. The expression of ER, PgR, c-erbB2, CD44v6, and p53 in the primary and the locoregional tumor was analyzed in 70 patients with recurrent breast cancer. Antigen expression correlated well between the primary and the matching recurrent tumor for all antigens under study. However, hormone receptor expression was lost in more than 50% of the cases, without significant impact on the disease-free survival interval. The disease-free interval was significantly longer for PgR-positive primary tumors, but did not depend on the ER status. The expression or changes of c-erbB2, CD44v6, and p53 were not related to the recurrence-free time intervals. Therefore, for treatment, it seems important to consider a possible loss of hormone receptors during tumor progression.
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PMID:Comparison of immunohistological parameters in primary breast cancers and corresponding locoregional recurrences. 1645 45

The endothelial cell-specific form of nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) may play an important role in tumor progression via angiogenesis or apoptosis. We studied eNOS -786T > C and 894G > T (Glu298Asp), two functionally significant SNPs, in relation to hazard of breast cancer recurrence or death in 873 women with incident, non-metastatic breast cancer, recruited from two teaching hospitals in Seoul, Korea, 1995-2002. Hazards were estimated by Cox proportional hazard models, in relation to genotype, adjusting for hormone receptor status, lymph node involvement, and tumor size. Women carriers of the eNOS -786C allele had significantly increased hazards of breast cancer recurrence or death, compared with women having the TT genotype (HR = 2.1, 95% CI = 1.03-4.33); risks increased up to 3-fold in ER positive cases (HR = 3.2, 95% CI = 0.95-10.50). The hazard was also increased in eNOS 894T carriers, however, it did not reach statistical significance (HR = 1.8, 95% CI = 0.85-3.93). The combined genotypes containing -786C or 894T was associated with a 2.5-fold risk, compared to the TT-GG genotypes, the most dominant genotype combination (95% CI = 1.29-4.68), with the greatest risks in ER positive cases (HR = 4.9, 95% CI = 1.31-18.36). These results indicate that the eNOS -786C polymorphism, and possibly the 894T polymorphism, are associated with breast cancer recurrence and death, particularly in women with ER positive tumors.
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PMID:Genetic polymorphisms of eNOS, hormone receptor status, and survival of breast cancer. 1682 Oct 86

The anti-apoptotic molecule, Bcl-2, is well known to play an important role in the chemoresistance of breast cancer. We have previously demonstrated that phosphorylation of Fas-associated death domain-containing protein (FADD) at 194 serine through c-jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) activation sensitizes breast cancer cells to chemotherapy through accelerating cell cycle arrest at G2/M, and that Bcl-2 phosphorylation downstream of JNK/FADD plays an important role in cell growth suppression by paclitaxel. In this study, the clinicopathological association of phosphorylated Bcl-2 (P-Bcl-2) with estrogen, progesterone, c-erbB-2 receptors, p53 expressions and phosphorylated FADD/JNK (P-FADD/JNK) was analyzed immunohistochemically using 107 human breast cancer specimens. Expression of P-Bcl-2 was found to significantly correlate with lymphatic invasion, lymph node metastasis, but not histological differentiation, tumor grade or vascular and fatty invasion. The positivity of P-Bcl-2 was also significantly correlated to that of P-FADD/JNK. Thus, P-Bcl-2 as well as the P-FADD/JNK parameter might be useful markers for cancer progression, independent of the hormone receptor status, in human breast cancers.
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PMID:Bcl-2 phosphorylation has pathological significance in human breast cancer. 1711 50

The expansion of triplet repeat microsatellite sequences is the molecular correlate of anticipation in a number of rare Mendelian neurodegenerative disorders. This finding prompted us to study these sequences in primary breast cancer in which there is evidence of genetic anticipation. We used a PCR/silver stain method to determine whether triplet-repeat instability (TRI) was present in DNA from malignant breast tumors, and analyzed microsatellite instability (MSI) in triplets SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA6, HD, DRPLA and X25-GAA. We studied 54 consecutive primary breast cancers previously analyzed for dinucleotide instability (DI) at 9 loci. Microsatellite instability (TRI and/or DI) was found in 28/54 (52%) cases, ranging from 0 to 56% in each patient. Dinucleotide instability occurred at > or =2 loci in 19/54 (35%) cases and TRI in 6/54 (11%). Considering single locus instability, we found DI in 26/54 (48%) tumors and TRI in 13/54 (24%). Triplets DRPLA and X25-GAA were most frequently unstable (14% of cases); SCA2 instability was not detected. Interestingly, most tumors with TRI had DI (11/13, 85%). There was a correlation between TRI and DI in the same tumor (42 vs 7% in DI+ and DI- tumors respectively, p=0.0028). Furthermore, TRI appears more frequently associated with lymph node metastases and more advanced clinical stages and more frequent in patients <50 years old, with positive steroidal hormone receptor status, positive p185 and negative p53. These findings are of interest because they demonstrate a relationship between TRI and the clinicopathological characteristics of cancer aggressiveness. Triplet repeat alterations can interfere with gene expression and proteomic functions, which suggests they can play a role in the neoplastic progression of mammary cells. Furthermore, the association of TRI and DI in the same tumor suggests that alterations in the DNA repair gene could culminate in selective phenotypes and breast cancer progression in a considerable number of patients.
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PMID:Triplet repeat instability correlates with dinucleotide instability in primary breast cancer. 1714 98

The purpose of this study was to evaluate technical success, technique effectiveness, and survival following radiofrequency ablation for breast cancer liver metastases and to determine prognostic factors. Forty-three patients with 111 breast cancer liver metastases underwent CT-guided percutaneous radiofrequency (RF) ablation. Technical success and technique effectiveness was evaluated by performing serial CT scans. We assessed the prognostic value of hormone receptor status, overexpression of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), and presence of extrahepatic tumor spread. Survival rates were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Technical success was achieved in 107 metastases (96%). Primary technique effectiveness was 96%. During follow-up local tumor progression was observed in 15 metastases, representing a secondary technique effectiveness of 86.5%. The overall time to progression to the liver was 10.5 months. The estimated overall median survival was 58.6 months. There was no significant difference in terms of survival probability with respect to hormone receptor status, HER2 overexpression, and presence of isolated bone metastases. Survival was significantly lower among patients with extrahepatic disease, with the exception of skeletal metastases. We conclude that CT-guided RF ablation of liver metastases from breast cancer can be performed with a high degree of technical success and technique effectiveness, providing promising survival rates in patients with no visceral extrahepatic disease. Solitary bone metastases did not negatively affect survival probability after RF ablation.
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PMID:CT-guided radiofrequency ablation in patients with hepatic metastases from breast cancer. 1857 33

MicroRNA-21 (miR-21) is considered an onco-microRNA given its abilities to suppress the actions of several tumor suppressor genes and to promote tumor cell growth, invasion and metastasis. Recently, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) is found to up-regulate the expression of miR-21, and elevated miR-21 expression is seen frequently in breast cancer. To evaluate the effect of miR-21 on disease progression and its association with TGF-beta, we analyzed miR-21 expression in breast cancer. Fresh tumor samples were collected during surgery from 344 patients diagnosed with primary breast cancer. The expression of miR-21 in tumor samples was measured with a TaqMan microRNA assay using U6 as reference. Levels of miR-21 expression by disease stage, tumor grade, histology, hormone receptor status and lymph node involvement were compared. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was performed to assess the association of miR-21 expression with disease-free and overall survival. The study results showed that the expression of miR-21 was detected in all tumor samples with substantial variation. High miR-21 expression was associated with features of aggressive disease, including high tumor grade, negative hormone receptor status, and ductal carcinoma. High miR-21 was also positively correlated with TGF-beta1. No associations were found between patient survival and miR-21 expression among all patients, but high miR-21 was associated with poor disease-free survival in early stage patients (HR = 2.08, 95% CI: 1.08-4.00) despite no value for prognosis. The study supports the notion that miR-21 is an onco-microRNA for breast cancer. Elevated miR-21 expression may facilitate tumor progression, and TGF-beta may up-regulate its expression.
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PMID:High miR-21 expression in breast cancer associated with poor disease-free survival in early stage disease and high TGF-beta1. 1893 17


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