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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
The results of a 7-year monitoring of 230 patients with non-seminomatous testicular tumors are reported with respect to the employment of radioimmunoanalysis of alpha-fetoprotein and beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin
levels and CT examinations of retroperitoneum and lungs. Prior to orchiectomy, elevated levels of at least one of these markers were found in 79% of patients. After orchiectomy, tumor marker levels were in 70.4% of patients in agreement with the results of CT examinations. After the completion of chemotherapy, in more than a half of patients normal tumor marker levels and positive CT findings were observed. These results were most often due to the presence of mature teratoma. In Stage I patients the advantages of tumor marker determinations and CT examinations in the early detection of
tumor progression
have fully been confirmed.
...
PMID:Monitoring of patients with non-seminomatous germ cell tumors of the testis by determination of alpha-fetoprotein and beta-human chorionic gonadotropin levels and by computed tomography. 128 44
The authors believe that the preferred treatment for pineal region tumors in children requires definitive surgery with a histological diagnosis and that a conservative approach consisting of shunting and radiation therapy no longer seems to be appropriate. The results are reported of a retrospective review of the presentation, treatment, and outcome of 36 children under the age of 18 years treated between 1974 and 1986. Eleven children had germinomas (two-cell type), seven had astrocytomas, and the remaining 18 had 15 histologically different tumor types. Surgery was performed on 30 patients; there were no deaths, but a 10% rate of persistent morbidity was found. The median follow-up period was 4 years. Nine (82%) of 11 patients with germinomas are alive without evidence of recurrence; one child died from recurrent tumor in the pineal region and another is presently being treated for recurrent tumor of the spinal cord. Six (86%) of the seven patients with astrocytoma are well after biopsy and radiation therapy. Of the remaining 18 children, five (28%) died from
tumor progression
. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tumor markers alpha-fetoprotein and beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin
were helpful in determining the presence of malignant germ-cell tumors, particularly those with a poor prognosis. Magnetic resonance imaging was useful for diagnosis and for planning the operative approach. Magnetic resonance images showed the presence of pineal region tumors in four children with hydrocephalus who had no evidence of tumor on computerized tomography scans. Because the great variety of tumor types found in the pineal region must be treated in different ways and because improved microsurgical and stereotaxic surgical techniques have made mortality and morbidity rates acceptably low, a biopsy diagnosis should be obtained in all patients. Preoperative assessment of CSF tumor markers and cytology is useful for the identification of patients who have a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Pineal region tumors in children. 245 17
In 82 patients with non-seminomatous germ cell tumors, the levels of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), human
chorionic gonadotropin
(HCG) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were determined to find if there was a relation to clinical stage. Only two out of 34 patients could be restaged as a result of the presence of elevated marker levels. Markers were present in 12% of patients with stage IIA, 67% with stage IIB and 85% with stage III. In contrast to HCG, the initial levels of LDH and AFP were related to tumor stage. A return of marker levels to normal during chemotherapy always meant tumor regression and indicated complete remission in 42% of patients. Initial marker levels did not correlate with the eventual destructionn of all tumor by chemotherapy. A rise in marker levels always correlated with
tumor progression
. In conclusion, tumor markers have only a limited value in clinical staging. Disappearance of markers during chemotherapy does not always indicate destructio of all viable tumor, probably because non-producing cell lines such as mature teratoma may persist after chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Tumor markers in patients with non-seminomatous germ cell tumors of the testis. 617 Sep 52
Transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder is a neoplasm with variability in its clinical behavior. Although there are several studies correlating stage and ABO isoantigen expression with invasiveness, there is no single predictor factor to assess the potential invasiveness, especially in the low grade, non-invasive TCC. In the present study we evaluated the correlation of histological grade plus stage and the expression of beta human
chorionic gonadotropin
(beta-hCG), in 100 cases of TCC, with the clinical behavior. These features were correlated with
tumor progression
in patients with at least two years of follow up. We observed more aggressiveness in G4 group (high grade and invasive) (93% had
tumor progression
) when compared to G1 group (low grade and superficial) (11% had
tumor progression
). However in 25.5% of the TCC cases (groups G2: low grade and invasive and G3: high grade and superficial) the clinical behavior was intermediate, showing some limitation in using grading and staging only, as a predictive factor. There was an expression of beta-hCG in 21.4% of the cases in up to 25% of the tumor cells without any trophoblastic morphology. These beta-hCG producing TCC had a strong correlation with aggressiveness: 39.1% and 12.8% of the TCC expressed beta-hCG with and without
tumor progression
, respectively.
...
PMID:Expression of beta-human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG) in non-trophoblastic elements of transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder: possible relationship with the prognosis. 810 35
Testicular germ-cell tumors are relatively rare in childhood and adolescence, accounting for only 3.9% of all neoplasms. However, they have become a model for curable cancer. Furthermore, most of them have accurate serum markers [beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin
and alpha-fetoprotein], which provide in clinical stage I disease after semicastration a "wait and see" program. MAHO 82, 88, and 92 were cooperative studies on the treatment of testicular germ-cell tumors in childhood and adolescence. Between 1982 and 1993, 137 patients were registered. In all, 76 patients suffered from yolk-sac tumors (YST); 30, from differentiated teratomas (TD); 29, from malignant teratomas of either intermediate (MTI), undifferentiated (MTU), or trophoblastic type (MTT); and 2, from seminomas. All patients received semicastration. Chemotherapy was given to 53 patients on the basis of disease stage and histology. Standard therapy consisted of four courses of vinblastine, bleomycin and cisplatin. However, if viable tumor was suspected after two courses, delayed laparotomy was performed (seven patients). If there was then complete tumor regression, standard therapy was continued (four patients). If there was an incomplete tumor response, the patients received as salvage therapy three courses of etoposide (VP-16), ifosfamide, and cisplatin (three patients). Among the patients with YST, 73 had stage I disease and 3, higher-stage disease; 1 of these died due to
tumor progression
. In all, 56 patients were followed according to the "wait and see" policy; 9 of these needed a delayed standard chemotherapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Testicular germ-cell tumors in childhood and adolescence. 852 92
By establishing short-term cell cultures derived from retroperitoneal metastasis after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, our aim was to improve the diagnosis and prognosis in patients with advanced testicular germ cell tumors. The histological evaluation of surgically removed metastatic tissue by retroperitoneal lymphadenectomy (RLA) is extremely complicated after previous chemotherapy, but knowledge of persistence of vital tumor cells in residual lesions is of great prognostic value and therapeutic consequence in patients with testicular germ cell tumors. We therefore investigated whether vital tumor tissue could be detected in short-term cell cultures derived from such metastatic lesions by measuring the concentration of the tumor markers beta human
chorionic gonadotropin
(beta HCG) and alpha-1 fetoprotein (AFP) in cell culture supernatants. We initially demonstrated the specificity of the determination in cell cultures of human transitional-cell carcinoma cell lines, human foreskin fibroblasts and normal testicular tissue. In a group of 20 patients with untreated primary testicular germ cell tumors, detection of beta HCG and AFP was increased about threefold in cell culture supernatants in comparison to the serum concentration. Finally, we prepared primary cell cultures from surgically removed retroperitoneal metastasis of 12 patients with testicular germ cell tumors after chemotherapy. The serum concentrations of beta HCG and AFP of all patients were at normal values when RLA was performed. However, pathologically increased concentrations of beta HCG (3/3) and AFP (2/3) in cell culture supernatants were found in 3 of 12 cell cultures. Interestingly, these three patients with a pathological increase in beta HCG and AFP as determined in the supernatant of the short-term cell cultures had
tumor progression
within a mean follow-up of 3 +/- 1 months (P < 0.01), whereas 9 of 12 patients who had no pathological increase in beta HCG and AFP as determined in the supernatant of the short-term cell culture were in complete remission (CR) after a mean follow-up of 40 +/- 11.6 months.
...
PMID:Detection of vital germ cell tumor cells in short-term cell cultures of primary tumors and of retroperitoneal metastasis--clinical implications. 914 79
Human
chorionic gonadotropin
(hCG) is expressed by common cancers and may play a role in cell transformation as well as angiogenic, metastatic, and immune escape phenomena that are central to
cancer progression
. Clinical trials with a vaccine targeting the carboxy-terminal peptide of -hCG have indicated that tolerance to this oncofetal antigen can be broken. Humoral responses that may modulate the biologic activity of tumor-associated hCG as well as cellular responses to hCG have been generated. Studies are in progress to further define the biologic significance of hCG in cancer and to develop a vaccine approach that will best target this expression.
...
PMID:Human chorionic gonadotropin as a target for cancer vaccines. 986 94
Greater than 95% of ovarian cancers originate in the epithelial cells on the surface of the ovary. The current study investigates the expression and action of transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha) in ovarian surface epithelium (OSE) and the underlying stroma in both normal and tumorigenic ovarian tissues. Normal bovine ovaries are used in the current study as a model system to investigate normal OSE functions. Transforming growth factor alpha and its receptor, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), were detected in the OSE from normal ovaries by immunocytochemistry (ICC). Ovarian stromal tissue also contained reduced but positive TGFalpha and EGFR immunostaining. To examine TGFalpha and EGFR gene expression, RNA was collected from normal bovine OSE and ovarian stromal cells. The TGFalpha and EGFR transcripts were detected in both fresh and cultured OSE and stromal cells by a sensitive quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (QRT-PCR) assay. Transforming growth factor alpha gene expression was found to be high in freshly isolated OSE, but low in freshly isolated stroma. In contrast, EGFR expression was higher in the stroma compared to the OSE. Both the ICC and QRT-PCR indicate that normal OSE express high levels of TGFalpha in vivo and in vitro. In vitro, normal ovarian stromal cells develop the capacity to express high levels of EGFR. Human ovarian tumors from stage II, stage III, and stage IV ovarian cancer cases were found to express TGFalpha and EGFR protein in the epithelial cell component of the tumor by ICC analysis. The stromal cell component of human ovarian tumors contained little or no TGFalpha/EGFR immunostaining. Observations suggest that
tumor progression
may in part require autocrine stimulation of the epithelia. Transforming growth factor alpha was found to stimulate the growth of normal bovine OSE and stroma cells to the same level as epidermal growth factor. Two ovarian cancer cell lines, SKOV3 and OCC1, were also stimulated to proliferate in response to TGFalpha. Transforming growth factor alpha was also found to stimulate the expression of two growth factors previously shown to be produced by OSE. Transforming growth factor alpha stimulates both kit ligand/stem cell factor and keratinocyte growth factor production by OSE. The effect of hormones on TGFalpha and EGFR expression by the OSE was also examined. Human
chorionic gonadotropin
stimulated TGFalpha expression, but not FSH. Both hCG and FSH stimulated EGFR expression by OSE. Combined observations suggest a role of systemic hormones and a locally produced growth factor, TGFalpha, in OSE biology. Insight is also provided into how the OSE may develop abnormal growth characteristics involved in the onset and progression of ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:Expression and action of transforming growth factor alpha in normal ovarian surface epithelium and ovarian cancer. 1095 22
Choriocarcinoma was diagnosed in a 77-year-old woman with an acute massive, painless hematuria. One year after anterior pelvic exenteration and ileal conduit, the beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin
level increased to 934 mIU/mL without any sign of
tumor progression
. After six courses of chemotherapy (vincristine, actinomycin, and cyclophosphamide), the beta-human
chorionic gonadotropin
levels returned to normal. To our knowledge, this is the fourth case of pure choriocarcinoma in the bladder, with the longest survival time of 33 months so far.
...
PMID:Pure primary choriocarcinoma of the urinary bladder with long-term survival. 1106 19
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