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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (lung cancer)
71,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mean serum levels of beta-carotene and vitamin A in a multivariate analysis of data from 64 histologically confirmed male lung cancer cases were statistically significantly lower than those from 63 randomly selected male hospital controls, who were admitted for small surgical operations (p values for both beta-carotene and vitamin A less than 0.001). The mean serum levels of zinc were not statistically significantly different between cases and controls (p = 0.10). The levels of beta-carotene, vitamin A, or zinc were not statistically significantly influenced by either the extent of the cancer (p = 0.45) or the cancer cell type (p = 0.06). The possible biological significance of these findings is discussed briefly.
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PMID:Serum levels of beta-carotene, vitamin A, and zinc in male lung cancer cases and controls. 271 Jun 58

Copper, zinc, magnesium, calcium and iron were measured in serum and lung tissue - tumor mass and histologically nonneoplastic tissue - from lung cancer patients and compared with serum concentrations in healthy subjects and control lung tissue obtained from patients with nonmalignant lung disease. Lung cancer patients showed a significant increase in serum Cu and Cu/Zn ratio levels and decrease in serum Zn and Fe concentrations. These findings were correlated with TNM stage of the disease, but not with histologic type of tumor. Malignant lung tissue showed a higher level of Cu, Ca, Mg, and Cu/Zn ratio and lower Zn level than that found in control samples, as well as an increase in Cu, Mg and Cu/Zn ratio concentrations with regard to histologically nonneoplastic tissue samples from the same patient. Tissue concentration of trace metals was not significantly influenced either by histologic type of tumor or clinical TNM stage. Significant correlation coefficients between serum and tissue trace metal levels were not found.
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PMID:Serum and tissue trace metal levels in lung cancer. 274 65

Serum copper (SCu), zinc (SZn) and ceruloplasmin (SCP) concentrations were measured in 199 patients with lung cancer and 81 with nonmalignant lung disease. No significant differences were detected between these groups in the mean concentrations or in the SCu:SZn ratio, nor was any correlation found between the histological type or clinical extent of the tumor and the level of SCu, SZn or SCP. SCu and SCP increased significantly in accordance with the symptomatic stages of Feinstein, and in a parallel manner. These measures were also significantly higher in the patients who died within 4 months of diagnosis than in those who lived for 4 months or longer. SZn was similar throughout and was not predictive of the prognosis. It is concluded that SCu, SZn and SCP determinations are of no help in distinguishing malignant from nonmalignant lung disease and are only of limited importance for estimating the extent of the disease or the prognosis of a patient with lung cancer.
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PMID:Serum copper, zinc and ceruloplasmin concentrations in patients with lung cancer. 282 95

In this report we describe the isolation and characterization of a neutral metalloproteinase, from human small cell lung cancer cells, which degrades a wide range of connective tissue proteins. Treatment of tumor cytosol by ammonium sulphate precipitation followed by zinc chelated column chromatography, anion exchange chromatography, and gel filtration chromatography yielded a single enzymatically active protein, which on SDS-PAGE appeared as a diffuse band of 65,000-70,000 daltons. The tumor metalloproteinase, which was inhibited by metal chelators and serum, was able to digest gelatin, type I collagen, type IV collagen, laminin, and fibronectin. We propose that the capacity of this proteinase to degrade both components of blood vessel basement membranes and other connective tissue matrices facilitates the dissemination of human lung cancer cells during the multistep process of metastasis.
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PMID:Characterization of a connective tissue degrading metalloproteinase from human small cell lung cancer cells. 283 54

Forty-two patients with lung cancer and 72 healthy subjects were studied in order to determine a possible relationship between serum zinc and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), a peptidyl dipeptide hydrolase. Serum zinc levels were 105 +/- 21 micrograms/dl in control subjects and 50 +/- 19 micrograms/dl in patients, and angiotensin-converting enzyme activity was 296 +/- 28 U/l in the former and 240 +/- 55 U/l in the latter using hippurylglycylglycine as a substrate. The findings obtained show that the decreased levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme may be related to decreased serum zinc levels and that the primary defect may be the zinc deficiency in these patients.
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PMID:Serum zinc and angiotensin-converting enzyme levels in patients with lung cancer. 285 86

Serum zinc (Zn), copper (Cu), and the Cu/Zn ratio were evaluated in 84 patients with pulmonary lesions before surgery and in 100 healthy normal controls. There were 20 patients with benign and 64 with malignant lung tumors. Only the mean (+/- SD) Cu/Zn ratio was significantly higher in malignant tumors (2.24 +/- 0.78) than in benign tissue (1.63 +/- 0.33) (P less than 0.001). In the normal group, the Cu/Zn ratio was significantly lower (1.43 +/- 0.29). Patients with advanced disease (Stage III) had higher Cu/Zn ratio than patients in Stages I and II (2.65 +/- 0.86 versus 1.9 +/- 0.27) (P less than 0.001). At a cutoff value of 1.72, Cu/Zn ratio had a sensitivity of 89%, specificity of 84%, positive predictive value of 78%, and negative predictive value of 92% between controls and lung cancer patients. Between lung cancer patients and patients with benign pulmonary lesions the aforementioned values were 89%, 70%, 90%, and 70% respectively. A correlation between increasing Cu/Zn ratio and tumor extension and postoperative survival was observed. These findings suggest that Cu/Zn ratio may be used as a diagnostic test in lung cancer patients.
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PMID:Use of the copper/zinc ratio in the diagnosis of lung cancer. 291 79

The 1916 painters and the 1948 electricians who resided in the Canton of Geneva at the time of the 1970 census were identified and followed up to 1984. During the study period 121 disability pensions were awarded to painters and 59 to electricians. Age standardised incidence of disability per 1000 man-years at risk was higher among painters than among electricians for all neuropsychiatric causes (1.23/1000 and 0.68/1000, respectively) and for all other causes (5.50/1000 and 3.41/1000, respectively). No case of presenile dementia was diagnosed among painters. There was inadequate evidence to indicate that the higher risk of neuropsychiatric disability for painters might have been due to their occupational exposure to organic solvents. A possible toxic effect of these substances on the central nervous system was confounded with alcoholism which was associated with disability from neuropsychiatric disease in 12 of 20 painters and in only one of 10 electricians. Mortality and incidence of cancer were assessed among both cohorts and compared with the expected figures calculated from Geneva rates. Among painters there was a significant increase in overall mortality (O = 254, E = 218.5), in mortality from all cancers (O = 96, E = 75.4), and in incidence from all cancers (O = 159, E = 132.0). For the specific cancer sites, there was a significant excess risk for lung cancer (mortality: O = 40, E = 23.0), which was possibly related to occupational exposure to asbestos and to zinc chromate, although cigarette smoking was not controlled. The significant excesses of biliary tract cancer and of bladder cancer were in accordance with previous observations among painters from other countries. There was also a significant increase in incidence from testicular cancer (O=5, E=1.6), which has not been reported before. For causes of death other than cancer the excesses for alcoholism (O=5, E=0.8). for liver cirrhosis (O=14, E=8.8), for motor vehicle accidents (O=12, E=5.9), and for cerebrovascular disease when allowing for ten years of latency (O=8, E=4.0), were consistent with a probable increased risk of alcohol abuse. Among electricians overall mortality was similar to that expected (O=137, E=139.0). No significant excess risk was found for all cancers or for any specific cancer site. Because of the small number of expected deaths the statistical power was low for the assessment of a possible risk for leukaemia or for brain tumour.
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PMID:Disability, mortality, and incidence of cancer among Geneva painters and electricians: a historical prospective study. 292 Jan 39

Patients with bronchogenic carcinoma often have low serum zinc concentrations and sometimes have markedly elevated renal zinc losses. Since normal zinc metabolism is critical for the proper function of T lymphocytes and natural killer cells, the effect of zinc status on T cell phytohemagglutinin response and peripheral blood lymphocyte natural killer cell activity was studied in patients with lung cancer. Mean (+/- SEM) serum zinc concentration in 75 patients with cancer was 67.4 +/- 2.2 micrograms/dl versus 96.0 +/- 8.0 micrograms/dl for normal subjects. Patients with low serum zinc levels (less than 70 micrograms/dl) had significantly higher urine zinc excretion than patients with normal serum zinc levels (1,385 +/- 240 micrograms per 24 hours versus 392 +/- 107 micrograms per 24 hours) (p less than 0.001). This pattern of zinc concentrations (i.e., low serum zinc in combination with high urine zinc) is typical of patients with mild zinc deficiency, and suggests that a mild chronic zinc deficiency state was present in some of these patients. When lymphocyte data were analyzed according to serum zinc concentrations and urinary zinc excretion, low serum zinc concentration and high urine zinc excretion both correlated with depressed T cell phytohemagglutinin response (p less than 0.005 and p less than 0.001, respectively). For instance, mean maximal phytohemagglutinin response in patients with urinary zinc excretion of more than 700 micrograms per 24 hours was 22,132 +/- 3,201 cpm (n = 14) compared with 68,130 +/- 6,850 cpm for patients with normal zinc excretion (n = 7). Peripheral blood lymphocyte natural killer cell activity did not correlate with either serum or urine zinc values. Oral zinc sulfate (220 mg, three times daily for six weeks) was then administered to patients with hyperzincuria (mean = 992 micrograms per 24 hours). Zinc-supplemented patients had normalization of T cell phytohemagglutinin response after zinc therapy, whereas control patients demonstrated continued T cell dysfunction. Natural killer cell activity did not change in either group during the study period. These data suggest that a mild subclinical zinc deficiency state may exist in some patients with lung cancer and may be an important cause of abnormal T cell function. Furthermore, zinc supplementation may be useful to improve lymphocyte function in selected patients. Whether zinc supplementation would alter the course of the disease or the patient's prognosis is presently unknown.
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PMID:Association between urinary zinc excretion and lymphocyte dysfunction in patients with lung cancer. 299 69

One hundred ninety-two patients with previously untreated metastatic cancer (102 non-small-cell lung cancer [NSCLC]; 90 colorectal cancer) were randomized to receive either ad lib nutritional intake (control group) or specific nutritional intervention during a 12-week study period when chemotherapy was administered. Those patients randomized to nutritional interventions were counselled to take oral nutrients with caloric intake equal to 1.7 to 1.95 times their basal energy expenditure, depending on their pretreatment nutritional status ("standard" group). An augmented group was counselled to have a caloric intake equivalent to that of the standard group but with 25% of calories provided as protein and additional supplements of zinc and magnesium. Counselling increased caloric intake in both tumor types but reduced weight loss in the short term only for lung cancer patients. Ninety-three NSCLC patients were evaluable for tumor response to vindesine and cisplatin. Overall, only 20.4% of the patients responded, and there were no significant differences in response rates, median time to progression, or overall duration of survival between the nutrition intervention groups and the control group. The tumor response rate to time-sequenced 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and methotrexate in the 81 evaluable patients with colorectal cancer was only 14.8%, and no significant differences in tumor response rates were noted between the three groups. Furthermore, the median time to progression and overall duration of survival were not different for the control, standard, and augmented groups. Nutritional interventions using dietary counselling had no impact on the percent of planned chemotherapy dose administered, the degree of toxicity experienced by patients, or the frequency of treatment delays. A multivariate prognostic factor analysis demonstrated that for lung cancer, the percent of weight loss, serum albumin concentration, and presence of liver metastases were significant (P less than .05) and independent prognostic variables for survival duration. For colorectal cancer, serum albumin, alkaline phosphatase, lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, and percent targeted caloric intake (TCI) were significant independent predictors of survival duration.
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PMID:A randomized study of oral nutritional support versus ad lib nutritional intake during chemotherapy for advanced colorectal and non-small-cell lung cancer. 302 67

Lung cancer mortality was examined in a cohort of 4393 men employed at a zinc-lead-cadmium smelter. There was an excess of lung cancer (overall SMR = 124.5, 95% confidence interval 107-144) which was particularly evident for those employed for more than 20 years. A statistically significant trend in SMRs with increasing duration of employment was apparent. Quantitative estimates of exposure to cadmium and ordinal rankings for lead, arsenic, zinc, sulphur dioxide, and dust were used to calculate cumulative exposures from job histories. Matched logistic regression was used to compare the cumulative exposures of cases of lung cancer to those of controls matched for date of birth and date of starting work and surviving at the time of death of the matched cases. The increasing risk of lung cancer associated with increasing duration of employment could not be accounted for by cadmium and did not appear to be restricted to any particular process or department. Although lung cancer mortality was associated with estimates of cumulative exposure to arsenic and to lead, it was not possible to determine whether the increased risk might be due to arsenic, lead, or to other contaminants in the smelter. These results are compared with findings from other non-ferrous smelters.
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PMID:Lung cancer in a non-ferrous smelter: the role of cadmium. 339 80


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