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

Physiologically, B-lymphocytes are not present in the skin. Even in pathological situations they rarely occur. In contrast, primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCL) are characterized by proliferation of B lymphocytes within the skin. This suggests the existence of a certain microenvironment supporting homing and expansion of clonal B cells. Cytokines were demonstrated to be involved in the pathogenesis of cutaneous lymphomas of T-cell origin. Cytokine expression in cutaneous B-cell lymphoma lesions, however, has not been investigated so far. Therefore, the mRNA level of several cytokines was analyzed in biopsies from 7 patients with CBCL and compared to pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma (n = 6), psoriasis (n = 9), and healthy skin (n = 7), using a competitive RT-PCR approach. An overexpression of TNF-alpha, IL-10, and IL-6 was found. Enhanced IL-8 mRNA expression was detected in 2/7 cases. The overexpression of IL-6 and IL-10 in CBCL might be of particular importance, since these cytokines are considered to support B-cell growth. Additionally, the overexpression of IL-10 may contribute to tumor progression since this immunosuppressive cytokine might be involved in downregulation of immunological tumor surveillance, in part by inhibiting type 1 cytokine formation. In fact, we did not detect IFN-gamma and IL-2 expression. Taken together, we found a cytokine pattern in CBCL lesions which might contribute to tumor B-cell growth.
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PMID:Cytokine expression in primary cutaneous germinal center cell lymphomas. 1068 78

The band 1q21 is among the most common sites affected by chromosomal translocations in lymphoid, myeloid, epithelial, and sarcomatous lesions. In non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), translocations and duplications affecting this chromosomal site are frequently, but not exclusively, seen in association with primary abnormalities such as the t(14;18)(q32;q21) and t(8;14)(q24;q32) translocations, suggesting a role for 1q21 rearrangements in tumor progression. We report here the characterization and cloning of breakpoints in a case of extranodal ascitic B-cell lymphoma with a t(1;14)(q21;q32) translocation. The breakpoints on the der(1) and der(14) chromosomes were mapped by fluorescence in situ hybridization and Southern blot analysis and cloned using an IGHG (Cgamma) probe. The translocation linked the IGHG4 switch (Sgamma4) sequences of the productively rearranged allele to chromosome 1 sequences downstream of MUC1, leaving the MUC1 transcriptional unit intact. MUC1 was markedly overexpressed in the tumor at the mRNA and protein levels relative to lymphoma cell lines lacking a 1q21 rearrangement. Presumably, MUC1 transcription is aberrantly regulated by the IGHA (Calpha) 3' enhancer element retained on the same chromosome. Screening of a panel of B-cell lymphomas by Southern blot analysis identified a subset with a 3' MUC1 breakpoint and another with low-level amplification of MUC1. MUC-1 mucin has previously been shown to be frequently overexpressed in human epithelial cancers and to be associated with tumor progression and poor clinical outcome. Thus, MUC1 activation by chromosomal translocation, rearrangement, and amplification, identified here for the first time in NHL, is consistent with its suggested role in tumorigenesis. (Blood. 2000;95:2666-2671)
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PMID:MUC1 is activated in a B-cell lymphoma by the t(1;14)(q21;q32) translocation and is rearranged and amplified in B-cell lymphoma subsets. 1075 49

Different studies have already shown that the isolated inactivation of p21, p16, or p27 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKIs) is associated with increased growth fraction, tumor progression, or decreased overall survival in cases of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. In this study we linked molecular study of the p53 and p16 genes with immunohistochemical analysis of p27 expression in a group of aggressive B-cell lymphomas [large B-cell lymphomas (LBCLs) and Burkitt's lymphomas]. This was done to analyze the relationship between p53 and p16 silencing, p27 anomalous overexpression, and clinical follow-up, testing the hypothesis that the accumulation of CKI alterations could confer to the tumors a higher aggressivity. In a group of 62 patients, p53 inactivation as a result of mutation was observed in 11 cases (18%) and p16 silencing was seen in 27 cases (43.5%) as a result of methylation (20 of 62), 9p21 deletion (7 of 44), or p16 mutation (2 of 62). The simultaneous inactivation of p53 and p16 was detected exclusively in five LBCL cases. Anomalous expression of p27, which has been proven to be associated with the absence of p27/CDK2 complexes and the formation of p27/cyclin D3 complexes where p27 is inactivated, was detected in 19 of 61 cases (31%). Cases characterized by p27 anomalous expression display concurrent inactivation of p21 (provided by p53 mutations) and/or p16 CKIs in 11 of 14 LBCL cases (P = 0.040). When the relationship between the association of inactivated CKIs and overall survival was considered, a significant relationship was found between a lower overall survival probability and an increased number of inactivated CKIs in LBCL cases, with the worst prognosis for the cases displaying concurrent p53, p16, and p27 alterations. This proves that simultaneous inactivation of different tumor suppressor pathways does indeed take place, and that tumor aggressiveness takes advantage of this CKI-concerted silencing. In this same series of data, Burkitt's lymphoma patients seem to behave in a different way than LBCLs, with p53 and p16 alteration being mutually exclusive and the association with p27 anomalous expression not being clinically significant. These facts seem to support that the additive effect of the inactivation of different CKIs could be dependent of the histological type.
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PMID:Overall survival in aggressive B-cell lymphomas is dependent on the accumulation of alterations in p53, p16, and p27. 1143 67

Tumor-specific clonal immunoglobulin expressed by B-cell lymphomas (idiotype [Id]) can serve as a target for active immunotherapy. We have previously described the vaccination of 4 patients with follicular lymphoma using dendritic cells (DCs) pulsed with tumor-derived Id protein and now report on 35 patients treated using this approach. Among 10 initial patients with measurable lymphoma, 8 mounted T-cell proliferative anti-Id responses, and 4 had clinical responses--2 complete responses (CRs) (progression-free [PF] for 44 and 57 months after vaccination), 1 partial response (PR) (PF for 12 months), and 1 molecular response (PF for 75+ months). Subsequently, 25 additional patients were vaccinated after first chemotherapy, and 15 of 23 (65%) who completed the vaccination schedule mounted T-cell or humoral anti-Id responses. Induction of high-titer immunoglobulin G anti-Id antibodies required coupling of Id to the immunogenic carrier protein keyhole limpet hemocyanin (Id-KLH). These antibodies could bind to and induce tyrosine phosphorylation in autologous tumor cells. Among 18 patients with residual tumor at the time of vaccination, 4 (22%) had tumor regression, and 16 of 23 patients (70%) remain without tumor progression at a median of 43 months after chemotherapy. Six patients with disease progression after primary DC vaccination received booster injections of Id-KLH protein, and tumor regression was observed in 3 of them (2 CRs and 1 PR). We conclude that Id-pulsed DC vaccination can induce T-cell and humoral anti-Id immune responses and durable tumor regression. Subsequent boosting with Id-KLH can lead to tumor regression despite apparent resistance to the primary DC vaccine.
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PMID:Idiotype-pulsed dendritic cell vaccination for B-cell lymphoma: clinical and immune responses in 35 patients. 1186 Dec 63

B-cell malignancies account for the majority of lymphoid tissue neoplasia. Similar to normal B cells, malignant B cells in most Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's types of lymphomas express B-cell receptor (BCR) on their membrane. Since neoplastic B cells retain the capacity to respond to microenvironmental signals, and in many respects still behave as normal B cells, it does not seem bizarre that the BCR, which dominates the biology of normal B cells, can remain equally important for some malignant B cells. Indirect evidence suggests that retained BCR expression, and in certain cases coupled with stimulation by antigen (Ag), may be necessary for the viability of some B-cell tumors. The aim of this review is to consider the evidence regarding the role of the BCR in tumorigenesis of B-cell lymphomas, and discuss different approaches used in evaluating this role in the persistence and progression of these malignancies. The diversity in B-cell lymphomas prevents easy classification of these cancers based on their dependence on BCR expression. It seems likely that some malignant B cells need BCR expression, or additionally, stimulation by Ag in order to survive. However, through accumulation of additional genetic changes, the original tumor can give rise to a clone that no longer requires signals from the BCR to survive. Thus, most B-cell lymphomas may initially retain dependence on BCR expression that governs normal B-cell physiology and may lose it only at later stages of tumor progression, through the accumulation of additional transforming events.
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PMID:Malignant B cells and antigenic receptor: necessity or habit? 1238 17

To identify genes that are associated with progression of malignant lymphoma, the expression profiles of 18,432 genes were analyzed in diffuse large B-cell lymphomas at early (stages I and II, 6 cases) and advanced stages (stages III and IV, 9 cases) by means of cDNA microarrays. By comparing expression profiles between localized and advanced lymphomas, a number of genes that were differentially expressed were identified: 48 genes with increased expression and 30 genes with reduced expression in advanced-stage diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Increased expression of MPHOSPH1, RUVBL1, CHN2, PSA and CDC10 genes, and reduced expression of COL1A2, COL4A1, FBLN5, CLECSF6, MIC2, CAV1 and S100A10 genes in the advanced lymphoma group were confirmed by semi-quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. RUVBL1 and PSA expression was further confirmed by real-time quantitative PCR, whose results paralleled the microarray data. The highly expressed genes encode proteins that promote cell proliferation and the genes with reduced expression encode adhesion proteins and target protein for cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. These findings suggested that analysis with cDNA microarrays is a useful approach for identifying genes related to tumor progression and their products could be potential tumor markers or disease-specific targets for anti-tumor therapy.
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PMID:Microarray analysis of gene-expression profiles in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: identification of genes related to disease progression. 1271 67

Deletions in the long arm of chromosome 6 (6q) are among the most frequent chromosome aberrations in lymphoid neoplasms. Recently, the region of minimal deletion (RMD1) in 6q27 was narrowed down to 5-9 Mb. In the present study, we aimed to define the distal border of the commonly lost region in 6q27 more precisely and to identify and investigate tumor-suppressor genes (TSGs) from this region. Twenty-nine cases, in which our previous fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) screening that used a set of 36 YAC probes revealed loss in 6q25-27, were further investigated by means of FISH. In all cases, deletions of 6q27 extended from yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) 977e10 spanning the proximal border of RMD1 to the most telomeric YAC 933f7 within the recently established YAC-contig of this region. An interstitial homozygous deletion, flanked by the telomeric probe TelVysion6q and YAC 971g12, was detected, which substantially narrows down the RMD1. To identify candidate TSGs down-regulated in malignant lymphomas from this region of homozygous loss, we performed electronic profiling of expressed sequences mapped to this region. This analysis suggested the gene PDCD2 originally thought to be involved in programmed cell death to be probably down-regulated in malignant B-cell lymphomas compared to normal B lymphocytes. Nevertheless, mutation analyses failed to identify mutations in the coding region of PDCD2 in nine lymphomas with FISH-proved 6q27 deletions. Furthermore, epigenetic studies in these nine and an additional 48 lymphomas did not show altered methylation of the PDCD2 locus in these tumors. Possibly haploinsufficiency is effectual in accelerating tumor progression.
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PMID:Identification of candidate tumor-suppressor genes in 6q27 by combined deletion mapping and electronic expression profiling in lymphoid neoplasms. 1280 Jan 55

p16/INK4a gene alterations have been associated with tumor progression in lymphoid malignancies. However, their significance in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma is unclear. We investigated p16 gene methylation and mutation in a large series of untreated cases of pulmonary MALT lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBL), and correlated p16 gene alterations with a MALT lymphoma-specific API2-MALT1 fusion and the clinicopathologic features of MALT lymphoma. The API2-MALT1 fusion was detected by multiplex reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction in 25/60 (42%) cases of MALT lymphoma, but none of 11 DLBLs. Methylation-sensitive single-strand conformation analysis showed that p16 gene methylation was frequently detected in 36/60 (60%) cases of MALT lymphoma. The gene was similarly methylated in DLBL cases (6/11, 55%). A p16 gene mutation was found in one (p16 gene-methylation) of 44 MALT lymphomas and in none of six diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Statistical analysis showed that the p16 gene methylation status did not correlate with API2-MALT1 fusion or any of the clinicopathologic factors including serum LDH, clinical stage, and increased large cells. These findings suggest that p16 methylation is not associated with tumor progression, but may be an early event in MALT lymphomagenesis that might be maintained through the progression of the tumor.
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PMID:p16/INK4a gene methylation is a frequent finding in pulmonary MALT lymphomas at diagnosis. 1583 93

The p63 gene, a homolog of the tumor suppressor gene TP53, maps to chromosome 3q27-28, a region frequently displaying genomic amplification in squamous cell carcinomas. p63 is expressed in a variety of epithelial tissues and has been reported to be critical for the normal development of stratified epithelia, including skin epidermis. In a previous study, the authors reported the expression of p63 in occasional cells in the germinal center of lymph nodes and also observed p63 expression in B-cell lymphomas, among other tumor types surveyed in that analysis. The present study was conducted to further analyze the potential clinical significance of identifying p63 expression, assessing a larger cohort of well-characterized patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) (n = 172 cases) and a panel of established lymphoma cell lines. p63 expression at the microanatomic detail was examined by immunohistochemistry using a monoclonal antibody (clone 4A4), while distinction of p63 isoforms was analyzed by Western blotting and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction using isoform-specific primers. The authors found that a subset of DLBCL (32% of cases) expressed p63 in the nuclei of neoplastic lymphocytes. Examination of the different p63 isoforms revealed that the DeltaNp63 species was expressed by only one cell line, while the other p63 isoforms were found in most cell lines analyzed. The authors also observed that p63 expression correlated with high proliferative index, as assessed by Ki-67 immunostaining. Even though in univariate analysis p63 expression did not correlate with overall survival, the association of p63 with increased proliferative index suggests its involvement in DLBCL tumor progression.
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PMID:Expression of p63 in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. 1608 48

Nonmyeloablative allogeneic transplantation provides a valuable therapeutic option for patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphomas, particularly those that have recurred after autologous transplantation. However, the absence of an intensive conditioning regimen renders this approach less effective for patients with aggressive or bulky lymphoma because rapid tumor growth may outpace the evolution of the graft-versus-lymphoma effect. Radioimmunotherapy provides an attractive, minimally toxic modality to safely prevent early progression of B-cell lymphomas and induce remissions without incurring the risks of traditional intensive therapy. This approach provides a time window during which a robust graft-versus-lymphoma effect may be established before tumor progression, thereby providing more effective long-term disease control. The rationale for incorporation of radioimmunotherapy into reduced intensity allogeneic transplantation regimens for non-Hodgkin lymphoma is discussed, as are current study designs, preliminary results, and future directions.
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PMID:Improving the efficacy of reduced intensity allogeneic transplantation for lymphoma using radioimmunotherapy. 1678 58


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