Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of simultaneous determinations of 4 tumor markers (carcinoembryonic antigen, calcitonin, creatinine kinase-BB, and DNA), we studied 31 patients with lung cancer, 22 with benign lung disease, and 15 normal volunteers as control subjects. The measurements were made by radioimmunoassay in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and in serum obtained on the same day. The results showed that in serum, only CEA levels were significantly higher in malignancy; in lavage fluids, all 4 markers were abnormally high in cancer patients when compared with control subjects (p less than 0.05); there was no correlation between the levels in lavage and those in the bloodstream. When the mean levels in lavage of the normal control subjects were designated as the limits for a positive test, significant association was found between malignancy and abnormally elevated marker concentration (p less than 0.01). The particular combination of CEA-BAL greater than 35 ng/mg, CEA-serum greater than 4 ng/ml, and calcitonin-BAL greater than 120 pg/mg taken together with the results of bronchoscopy (histologic and cytologic) showed the highest discriminating power between malignant and benign lung disease. The sensitivity of the bronchoscopy procedure increased from 50 to 89%, with at least 2 positive markers, and had a specificity of 71%. When both bronchoscopy and all 3 markers were negative, the results showed a negative predictive value of 100%. We conclude that tumor marker levels in lavage are a useful aid in the diagnosis of malignancy in patients undergoing bronchoscopy.
...
PMID:Usefulness of tumor markers in serum and bronchoalveolar lavage of patients undergoing fiberoptic bronchoscopy. 401 74

A study of the relation between smoking habits and lung cancer in male industrial workers over a period of three years has confirmed the earlier findings in doctors that the death-rate from lung cancer correlates closely with the number of cigarettes smoked. Of 54,460 men studied 68.7% were current cigarette smokers. The annual mortality rate from lung cancer was 0.33 per thousand in non-smokers and ex-smokers, and 1.2 per thousand for all cigarette smokers, and higher in heavy smokers.Heavy cigarette smokers who retained the cigarette in the mouth between puffs ("drooping" cigarette habit) had an annual mortality rate of 4.1 per thousand.The mortality from coronary thrombosis in smokers was nearly three times that in non-smokers. A mortality gradient with rising consumption of cigarettes was observed.Some correlation between smoking and cancer of other sites and from non-neoplastic lung disease was observed in older men, but no correlation was found with other cardiovascular diseases and cerebrovascular diseases.
...
PMID:Smoking habits of men employed in industry, and mortality. 566 65

Abnormal serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity has been reported in various human lung disorders and in laboratory animals with acute lung injuries. To test the value of serum ACE activity as an indicator of lung damage and its assistance in diagnosis or prognosis, 328 serum samples were obtained from 108 hospitalized patients with lung disease and 26 normal subjects. When patients were clinically grouped by disease entity, only the sarcoidosis group showed elevated mean serum ACE. Significantly increased serum ACE was found in 17 patients with various lung diseases (15% of hospitalized patients) 12 of whom also had concomitant liver disease. It is hypothesized that the liver may play a role in the normal metabolism of ACE being released by lung endothelial injury. Significantly low levels were seen in many acute and chronic lung injuries; specifically the groups with chronic obstructive lung disease, lung cancer, acute pneumonia, aspiration pneumonitis, gram-negative sepsis, acute myocardial infarction, and congestive heart failure. Serial measures of ACE in 71 patients with lung injuries showed that significantly decreasing levels over successive days were associated with a very high mortality. A single ACE measurement did not predict the presence or extent of lung injury, or aid in diagnosis or prognosis, but serial levels are of value prognostically.
...
PMID:The value of serial serum angiotensin converting enzyme determinations in hospitalized patients with lung disease. 609 28

The present study was undertaken to evaluate the specificity of antitumor immunity to human lung cancer, measured by an in vitro assay--tube leukocyte adherence inhibition (LAI). We standardized and monitored the putative tumor antigen activity of the extracts by testing leukocytes from controls and patients with lung cancer in the Montreal General Hospital. A specific antitumor response to a lung cancer antigen was detected with coded leukocytes from 56% (20 out of 36) of patients with epidermoid lung cancer. By contrast, 4% (2 out of 53) of patients with inflammatory lung disease and none of 46 other patients with cancer metastatic to the lung or with other diagnoses had an LAI-positive result. The LAI response was inversely related to the extent of cancer: 80% (8 of 10) with Stage I, 66% (2 of 3) with Stage II, 54% (6 of 11) with localized Stage III, and 33% (4 of 12) with widespread Stage III were LAI positive. Leukocytes from patients with epidermoid, adenocarcinoma, or small cell lung cancer reacted to a common tumor antigen shared by extracts of epidermoid and small cell lung cancer. This study with coded samples from a remote hospital confirms the results of other investigators that the LAI measures an antitumor immune response to human organ-specific neoantigens.
...
PMID:A coded study of antitumor immunity to human lung cancer assayed by tube leukocyte adherence inhibition. 626 45

The prevalence of high levels of circulating ACTH-like immunoactivity was determined in 134 patients with lung cancer, using reference ranges from 52 age- and sex-matched patients with non-malignant lung disease. Two studies used ACTH radioimmunoassays with different specificities. Study A used an unextracted plasma or serum assay for total ACTH immunoactivity. High serum ACTH levels occurred in 24% of patients with small-cell carcinoma and 3% of patients with non-small-cell cancer. In patients with small-cell carcinoma, levels were high in 12% with limited disease and 32% with extensive disease. Study B used an ACTH assay after plasma extraction by porous glass, which measured mainly regular 1-39 ACTH. Here no lung-cancer patient had levels above the reference range, suggesting that the high levels in Study A may be due to plasma ACTH components which are poorly extracted by porous glass. It is concluded that high circulating ACTH immunoactivity occurs in a minority of patients with lung cancer, particularly those with extensive small-cell carcinoma. Indirect evidence suggests that the high ACTH levels detected with assays for total ACTH are due to molecular forms other than 1-39 ACTH, probably high-mol.-wt species.
...
PMID:Circulating ACTH and related peptides in lung cancer. 627 59

Surgical resection of lung cancer is frequently required in patients with severely impaired lung function resulting from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Twenty patients with obstructive lung disease and cancer (mean preoperative forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1] = 1.73 L) were studied preoperatively and postoperatively by spirometry and radionuclide perfusion, single-breath ventilation, and washout techniques to test the ability of these methods to predict preoperatively the partial loss of lung function by the resection. Postoperative FEV1 and forced vital capacity (FVC) were accurately predicted by the formula: postoperative FEV1 (or FVC) = preoperative FEV1 X percent function of regions of lung not to be resected (r = 0.88 and 0.95, respectively). Ventilation and perfusion scans are equally effective in prediction. Washout data add to the sophistication of the method by permitting the qualitative evaluation of ventilation during tidal breathing. Criteria for patients requiring the study are suggested.
...
PMID:Prediction of postoperative pulmonary function following thoracic operations. Value of ventilation-perfusion scanning. 630 57

Serum levels of chorionic gonadotropin (HCG), testosterone, luteinizing hormone (LH) and prolactin were evaluated with the radioimmunoassay in 59 patients with lung cancer, 10 patients with benign lung disease, and 37 normal controls. HCG was present in 6.8% of the lung cancer patients but in none of the subjects of the other two groups. Prolactin and LH levels were significantly higher than normal in lung cancer patients (respectively p less than 0.001 and p less than 0.01) as well as in patients with benign lung disease (p less than 0.01 for both the hormones). Testosterone levels were significantly lower than normal in patients with lung cancer (p less than 0.05) but not in those with benign lung disease. When the patients were analyzed according to histologic type and clinical stage of disease, significantly lower than normal values of testosterone were found in patients with small cell carcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma. In the squamous cell carcinoma group, the patients with lymph node metastases had significantly lower testosterone levels than those without lymph node metastases. From these results, we may hypothesize that the raised levels of prolactin and LH are related to a pulmonary pathology, not necessarily neoplastic, whereas the low levels of testosterone are related to the presence of the tumor.
...
PMID:Abnormal serum hormone levels in lung cancer. 631 49

The search for tumor markers suitable for use in diagnosis and management of patients with lung cancer has met with limited success because each available marker lacks sufficient sensitivity and specificity. We have begun a collaborative study to evaluate multiple simultaneous serum markers to determine whether there is a combination that will increase both sensitivity and specificity to the degree that noninvasive serologic tests might provide a means for managing patients with lung cancer. The National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, has established a Serum Bank which can supply identical aliquots of the same serum sample to several different laboratories to perform quantitative assays for a number of markers. The results of these assays will serve as a data base to be analyzed for selection of the optimal grouping of markers for the different types of lung cancer and for evaluation of different biostatistical techniques to maximize the benefit derived by multiple marker determination. The evaluation of multiple markers will be carried out in several separate steps: (a) determination of a combination of markers that discriminate advanced lung cancer from benign lung disease; (b) demonstration of the ability of that combination to define early or localized lung cancer; (c) selection of a combination that best separates lung cancer from cancer of other sites; (d) testing of combined markers for the ability to predict response to therapy, including detection of early recurrence before clinical signs appear; and (e) evaluation of the combination(s) for effectiveness in detecting lung cancer in asymptomatic individuals. The experimental design and selection of markers will be presented and discussed.
...
PMID:Collaborative study for the evaluation of multiple simultaneous markers in lung cancer. 632 60

A counterimmunoelectrophoresis test for Pneumocystis carinii antigenemia was employed to assess the extent of subclinical infection or colonization with this agent in adults with infection, pulmonary disease, or malignancy and in healthy homosexual men. Antigenemia was detected in 6 of 208 (3%) of normal controls, 3 of 28 (11%) of patients with pulmonary infection, 3 of 33 (9%) of those with chronic lung disease, 1 of 36 (3%) of patients with lung cancer, 7 of 271 (3%) of afebrile subjects with malignancy, 6 of 19 (32%) of febrile patients with malignancy, 2 of 22 (9%) of those with nonpulmonary infection, and 0 of 21 (0%) of healthy young homosexual men. These data suggest that P. carinii is a common commensal or saprophyte that becomes clinically significant only when host defenses are impaired. Antigenemia may occur intermittently during various disease states in the absence of positive clinical signs and should alert the physician to subacute infection or colonization. Treatment appears advisable when clinical data and counterimmunoelectrophoresis results concur.
...
PMID:Pneumocystis carinii antigenemia in adults with malignancy, infection, or pulmonary disease. 633 94

A number of recent epidemiological studies of lung cancer among occupations that expose workers to dusts or toxic aerosols have reported a larger prevalence of lung cancer among non-smoking than among smoking workers. One recent study using Beagle dogs has also reported significantly fewer respiratory tumors among animals exposed to radon, radon daughters, uranium dust and tobacco smoke than among animals exposed similarly except for tobacco smoke. The evidence is summarized here that the increased mucus in the lungs of smokers may help in the elimination of dust and toxic substances by facilitating migration of particles and aerosols and possibly also adding protection by thickening of the mucus layer. Recent developments in use of in vivo magnetometric measurements of dust content of workers' lungs in fact indicate that lungs of chronically exposed miners and millers contain less dust if they smoke than if they do not. The hypothesis that increasing mucus in the lung of exposed workers may protect them against lung disease now needs experimental verification in appropriate animal studies. If protective qualities of lung mucus are verified, means need to be explored that will increase mucus flow in non-smoking (and smoking) workers exposed to respiratory hazards.
...
PMID:Possible effects on occupational lung cancer from smoking related changes in the mucus content of the lung. 663 Apr 4


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>