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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many agents used in cancer chemotherapy are known carcinogens. However, few secondary malignancies have been definitely linked to chemotherapy, since studies on this problem are complicated by methodological problems. A causal relationship has been established between alkylating agents and leukaemia and between cyclophosphamide and bladder cancer. The risk of leukaemia peaks at 5-10 years after beginning of chemotherapy and declines steadily after its end. The interaction between chemotherapy and radiotherapy has not been fully clarified, nor has the leukaemogenic potency of individual drugs, although combinations without
nitrogen
mustard seem to entail a lower risk. Other tumours reported at increased incidence, in particular among Hodgkin's disease patients, for whom a carcinogenic effect of chemotherapy seems plausible, are non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and
lung cancer
. Other secondary solid tumors have also been reported, but for none of them an independent effect of chemotherapy has been demonstrated.
...
PMID:Secondary malignancies following cancer chemotherapy. 794 33
We tested the hypothesis that the two common oxidant air pollutants, ozone and
nitrogen
dioxide, modulate the development of respiratory tract tumors in Syrian golden hamsters. The animals received subcutaneous injections of the carcinogen diethylnitrosamine (20 mg/kg) twice a week while being exposed continuously to an atmosphere of 0.8 parts per million (ppm)* of ozone or 15 ppm of
nitrogen
dioxide. Animals were killed 16 weeks or 24 to 32 weeks after the beginning of the treatment. Ozone delayed the appearance of tracheal tumors and reduced the incidence of tumors in the lung periphery. A suspected neuroendocrine differentiation of those lung tumors could not be established by immunocytochemistry due to overfixation of tissues. On the other hand, ozone seemed to mitigate development of hepatotoxic lesions mediated by diethylnitrosamine. In animals treated with diethylnitrosamine and exposed to
nitrogen
dioxide, fewer tracheal tumors and no lung tumors were found. Only a few lung tumors were produced in animals treated with diethylnitrosamine and kept in an atmosphere of 65% oxygen. The previously observed neuroendocrine nature of tumors induced by simultaneous exposure to diethylnitrosamine and hyperoxia could not be established because the long fixation of tissues precluded immunocytochemical stains. Animals treated with diethylnitrosamine and kept in filtered air while being housed in wire-mesh cages developed fewer lung tumors than animals given the same treatment and kept on conventional bedding in shoebox cages. Although all inhalants tested are known to produce substantial cell proliferation in the respiratory tract, it was not possible to document whether this would enhance lung tumor development. The role of the two common air pollutants, ozone and
nitrogen
dioxide, as possible additional risks in the pathogenesis of
lung cancer
in animals continues to remain uncertain.
...
PMID:Failure of ozone and nitrogen dioxide to enhance lung tumor development in hamsters. 821 71
Twelve preparations of crystalline silica, with a wide range of particle sizes, were assayed by a new method, which measures surface adsorption of the cationic dye Janus green B to crystalline silica samples in a buffered aqueous suspension. The same samples were also assayed for total surface area by the Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) method of surface adsorption of
nitrogen
gas. A strong linear correlation was found between the two methods of measurement (r = 0.977). Reproducible specific surface area measurements by the Janus green B adsorption method were made on 2-mg samples using ordinary visible wave-length spectrophotometric equipment, whereas the BET method necessitated sample sizes in excess of 100 mg and more specialized instrumentation. Five size-fractionated preparations from the same Min-U-Sil alpha-quartz sample showed an increase in BET surface area and Janus green B binding per unit weight with decreasing particle size. Among four standard alpha-quartz samples tested, Min-U-Sil 5 and F600 had the lowest specific surface areas, whereas DQ-12 and Chinese standard alpha-quartz had much higher surface areas. The synthetic silica preparations cristobalite and tridymite had intermediate surface areas. Binding by the cationic dye Janus green B is consistent with a surface charge mechanism and provides a useful new technique for the assessment of surface characteristics of crystalline silica samples. Its linear relationship to surface area suggests that the ratio of aqueous surface charge to surface area is constant for different crystalline silica preparations. Comparison of surface areas for different preparations of crystalline silica is important in understanding the relative activities of these preparations in studies on mechanisms of silicosis and silica-induced
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Binding of the cationic dye, Janus green B, as a measure of the specific surface area of crystalline silica in aqueous suspension. 823 62
Understanding the extent to which changes in whole-body protein kinetics contribute to the commonly observed weight loss and decrease in lean body mass (LBM) in patients with cancer is currently obscured by conflicting reports in the literature. While several studies have reported significant increases in whole-body protein turnover (WBPT), synthesis (WBPS), and catabolism (WBPC) in patients with cancer, others have failed to confirm these observations. We have measured whole-body protein kinetics using a primed constant infusion of 15N-glycine in a homogenous group of 32 newly diagnosed advanced
lung cancer
patients with comparable staging and before any antineoplastic treatment, and in 19 normal healthy volunteer controls. Urinary urea and ammonia 15N enrichment was determined in individually collected urine samples obtained during the 24-hour study period and averaged for the determination of protein kinetics. During the last 6 hours of urine collection, samples were obtained hourly for determination of 15N plateau enrichment. Twenty-four-hour urinary
nitrogen
and creatinine excretion was determined from 24-hour pooled urine samples. Resting metabolic expenditure (RME) was determined by indirect calorimetry and LBM was estimated from deuterium oxide dilution. Age body weight, LBM, RME, and 24-hour urinary
nitrogen
excretion did not differ between cancer and control subjects. WBPT, WBPC, and WBPS (g/kg/d) were significantly increased in
lung cancer
patients. However, when the same results were expressed either per kilogram LBM or per gram 24-hour urinary creatinine excretion, WBPT, WBPC, and WBPS rates were not statistically different from those of the controls.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Protein turnover in advanced lung cancer patients. 848 46
In 1950, the first large-scale epidemiological studies demonstrated that
lung cancer
is causatively associated with cigarette smoking, a finding subsequently confirmed by the Royal College of Physicians in London, the U.S. Surgeon General, and the World Health Organization. Although cigarette consumption has gradually decreased in the United States from a high of about 3800 cigarettes per adult per year in 1965 to about 2800 cigarettes in 1993, death from
lung cancer
has reached a high among males at the rate of 74.9/100,000/year and among females at the rate of 28.5. However, in the younger cohorts, the
lung cancer
death rate is decreasing in both men and women. In this overview we discuss the steeper increase during recent decades of lung adenocarcinoma incidence compared with squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. In 1950, the ratio of these two major types of
lung cancer
in males was about 1:18; today it is about 1:1.2-1.4. This overview discusses two concepts that are regarded as contributors to this change in the histological types of
lung cancer
. One factor is the decrease in average nicotine and tar delivery of cigarettes from about 2.7 and 38 mg in 1955 to 1.0 and 13.5 mg in 1993, respectively. Other major factors for the reduced emission of smoke relate to changes in the composition of the cigarette tobacco blend and general acceptance of cigarettes with filter tips; the latter constitute 97% of all cigarettes currently sold. However, smokers of low-yield cigarettes compensate for the low delivery of nicotine by inhaling the smoke more deeply and by smoking more intensely; such smokers may be taking up to 5 puffs/min with puff volumes up to 55 ml. Under these conditions, the peripheral lung is exposed to increased amounts of smoke carcinogens that are suspected to lead to lung adenocarcinoma. Among the important changes in the composition of the tobacco blend of the U.S. cigarette is a significant increase in nitrate content (0.5% to 1.2-1.5%), which raises the yields of
nitrogen
oxides and N-nitrosamines in the smoke. Furthermore, the more intense smoking by the consumers of low-yield cigarettes increases N-nitrosamines in the smoke 2- to 3-fold. Among the N-nitrosamines is 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a powerful lung carcinogen in animals that is exclusively formed from nicotine. This organ-specific tobacco-specific nitrosamine (TSNA) induces adenocarcinoma of the lung. All of these factors, the more intense smoking, the deeper inhalation of the smoke, and the increased yields of N-nitrosamines in the smoke of low-yield cigarettes, are considered major contributors to the drastic increase in lung adenocarcinoma among cigarette smokers in recent years. This overview also discusses the differences in the major
lung cancer
types in female compared with male smokers as well as the likely underlying factors for increased
lung cancer
risk among African Americans compared with that among white Americans. Although the only sure way to prevent smoking-related diseases is giving up the tobacco habit, there must be a measure of protection for those who cannot accomplish this. Therefore, setting upper permissible limits of tar levels for the smoke of U.S. cigarettes, similar to strategies already taken in Western Europe, should be considered.
...
PMID:The changing epidemiology of smoking and lung cancer histology. 874 74
Chinese females in Hong Kong, where only about a third of the
lung cancer
cases can be attributed to a history of active smoking, have a world age-standardized
lung cancer
incidence rate of 32.6 per 100 000, which is among the highest in the world. Trends in Hong Kong's female
lung cancer
mortality also indicate a tripling in mortality rates from 1961 to 1990. The characteristically high Chinese female
lung cancer
incidence among nonsmokers is also found among overseas Chinese communities in Singapore and Hawaii. To help elucidate the role of ingested and inhaled substances in the etiology of
lung cancer
, four epidemiological studies have been conducted in Hong Kong over the last 15 years: (1) a retrospective study of 200 cases and 200 neighbourhood controls, (2) a cross-sectional study measuring personal exposures to
nitrogen
dioxide among 362 children and their mothers, (3) a site monitoring study of 33 homes measuring airborne carcinogens, and (4) a telephone survey of 500 women on their dietary habits and exposure to air pollutants. Selected data from each study were drawn to evaluate exposures to three major air pollutants (environmental tobacco smoke, incense, and cooking fumes), their relationship with
lung cancer
risk, and their association with dietary habits. Generally in this population, nutritionally poorer diets were characterized by higher consumption of alcohol and preserved/cured foods, whereas better diets were characterized by higher intakes of fresh fruits, vegetables, and fish. For environmental tobacco smoke, exposure was only moderately high in Hong Kong (36% have current smokers at home),
lung cancer
risk was equivocal with exposure, and it was associated with poorer diets among wives with smoking husbands. Incense was identified as a major source of exposure to
nitrogen
dioxide and airborne carcinogens, but it had no effect on
lung cancer
risk among nonsmokers and significantly reduced risk (trend, P-value = 0.01) among smokers, even after adjusting for smoking. The last finding may be explained by the relatively better diets among smoking women who burned incense versus those who did not. Although about 94% of the Chinese women cook on a regular basis, and the cooking fires were associated with increased airborne carcinogens, nonsmoking women who cooked for more than 25 years had a 60% reduction in
lung cancer
risk and the trend was highly significant (P < 0.001). Again, this unexpected finding may be due to the confounding effects of diet. Female controls who cooked for more than 25 years had a poorer diet than those who cooked for shorter durations. These three examples were chosen to illustrate the complexities of assessing air pollution exposure, and understanding the behavioral and dietary dynamics underlying
lung cancer
risk assessments. Our conclusion is that diet can be an important confounding factor affecting
lung cancer
risk estimates from air pollution exposures among Chinese women living in an affluent urban environment.
Lung Cancer
1996 Mar
PMID:Diet as a confounder of the association between air pollution and female lung cancer: Hong Kong studies on exposures to environmental tobacco smoke, incense, and cooking fumes as examples. 878 67
Exposure to
nitrogen
dioxide (NO2), a common oxidant airborne pollutant, has been shown to cause reversible effects on lung function and airway responsiveness, in addition to airways inflammation. However, there have been conflicting reports concerning NO2-induced airway hyperresponsiveness. In the present study, we investigated the isotonic smooth muscle response in isolated human bronchi previously exposed in vitro to NO2. Bronchial segments were obtained from 12 patients who had undergone thoracotomy for
lung cancer
. Bronchial segments from each patient were exposed to air and to 2.5 parts per million (ppm) NO2 for 4 h. The contractile response of bronchial rings to acetylcholine, neurokinin A (NKA), and substance P was then studied under isotonic conditions. The response to NKA was also studied in rings, with or without epithelium, exposed either to air or 7 ppm NO2. No NO2-induced alteration of the bronchial smooth muscle isotonic response was found under any of the experimental conditions. We conclude that in vitro exposure to up to 7 ppm
nitrogen
dioxide does not cause alterations of the human bronchial smooth muscle shortening capacity.
...
PMID:Isotonic smooth muscle response in human bronchi exposed in vitro to nitrogen dioxide. 894 74
Nicotine is recognized to be the major inducer of tobacco dependence. The smoking of cigarettes as an advantageous delivery system for nicotine, accelerates and aggravates cardiovascular disease, and is causally associated with increased risks for chronic obstructive lung disease, cancer of the lung and of the upper aerodigestive system, and cancer of the pancreas, renal pelvis, and urinary bladder. It is also associated with cancer of the liver, cancer of the uterine cervix, cancer of the nasal cavity, and myeloid leukemia. In 1950, the first large-scale epidemiological studies documented that cigarette smoking induces
lung cancer
and described a dose-response relationship between number of cigarettes smoked and the risk for developing
lung cancer
. In the following decades these observations were not only confirmed by several hundreds of prospective and case-control studies but the plausibility of this causal association was also supported by bioassays and by the identification of carcinogens in cigarette smoke. Whole smoke induces lung tumors in mice and tumors in the upper respiratory tract of hamsters. The particulate matter of the smoke elicits benign and malignant tumors on the skin of mice and rabbits, sarcoma in the connective tissue of rats, and carcinoma in the lungs of rats upon intratracheal instillation. More than 50 carcinogens have been identified, including the following classes of compounds: polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), aromatic amines, and N-nitrosamines. Among the latter, the tobacco-specific N-nitrosamines (TSNA) have been shown to be of special significance. Since 1950, the makeup of cigarettes and the composition of cigarette smoke have gradually changed. In the United States, the sales-weighted average "tar" and nicotine yields have declined from a high of 38 mg "tar" and 2.7 mg nicotine in 1954 to 12 mg and 0.95 mg in 1992, respectively. In the United Kingdom, the decline was from about 32 mg "tar" and 2.2 mg nicotine to less than 12 mg "tar" and 1.0 mg nicotine per cigarette. During the same time, other smoke constituents changed correspondingly. These reductions of smoke yields were primarily achieved by the introduction of filter tips, with and without perforation, selection of tobacco types and varieties, utilization of highly porous cigarette paper, and incorporation into the tobacco blend of reconstituted tobacco, opened and cut ribs, and "expanded tobacco." In most countries where tobacco blends with air-cured (burley) tobacco are used, the nitrate content of the cigarette tobacco increased. In the United States nitrate levels in cigarette tobacco rose from 0.3-0.5% to 0.6-1.35%, thereby enhancing the combustion of the tobacco. More complete combustion decreases the carcinogenic PAH, yet the increased generation of
nitrogen
oxides enhances the formation of the carcinogenic N-nitrosamines, especially the TSNA in the smoke. However, all analytical measures of the smoke components have been established on the basis of standardized machine smoking conditions, such as those introduced by the Federal Trade Commission, that call for 1 puff to be taken once a minute over a 2-s period with a volume of 35 ml. These smoking parameters may have simulated the way in which people used to smoke the high-yield cigarettes; however, they no longer reflect the parameters applicable to contemporary smokers, and especially not those applicable to the smoking of low- and ultra-low-yield filter cigarettes. Recent smoking assays have demonstrated that most smokers of cigarettes with low nicotine yield take between 2 and 4 puffs per minute with volumes up to 55 ml to satisfy their demands for nicotine. The overview also discusses further needs for reducing the toxicity and carcinogenicity of cigarette smoke. From a public health perspective, nicotine in the smoke needs to be lowered to a level at which there is no induction of dependence on tobacco.
...
PMID:The changing cigarette, 1950-1995. 912 Aug 72
In this study, the authors investigated regional differences in
lung cancer
mortality in Japan, and, based on data acquired between 1970 and 1990 for 47 Japanese prefectures, estimated the relationship between regional
lung cancer
mortality and air pollution and/or temperature. Investigators used data for
nitrogen
dioxide, sulfur dioxide, motor vehicle density, tobacco expenditure, and temperature as independent variables for age-adjusted
lung cancer
death rates. The age-adjusted
lung cancer
death rates were higher in the southern geographical block of Japan (i.e., approximately 1.2-fold in males and 1.1-fold in females) and in the northern block (approximately 1.2-fold in males) than in the central block. The regional differences in the age-adjusted
lung cancer
death rates were explained by
nitrogen
dioxide and temperature. Temperature caused a greater effect (regression coefficients) of
nitrogen
dioxide on the age-adjusted
lung cancer
death rates than did
nitrogen
dioxide alone in the southern block (i.e., approximately 1.3-fold in males and 1.2-fold in females). These results provide the first evidence of a possible synergistic interaction between air pollution and high temperature on
lung cancer
mortality.
...
PMID:Air pollution, temperature, and regional differences in lung cancer mortality in Japan. 916 24
Cigarette smoking is a major cause of human cancer at a variety of sites, although its carcinogenic mechanisms remains unestablished. Cigarette smoke can be divided into two phases, gas phase and particulate matter (tar). Both phases contain high concentrations of oxidants and free radicals, especially nitric oxide (NO) and
nitrogen
oxides in the gas phase and quinone/hydroquinone complex in the tar. We have found that incubation of pBR322 plasmid DNA with aqueous extracts of cigarette tar and a NO-releasing compound (diethylamine NONOate) caused synergistic induction of DNA single-strand breakage, whereas either cigarette tar alone or NO alone induced much less strand breakage. This synergistic effect of cigarette tar and NO on DNA strand breakage was prevented by high concentrations of superoxide dismutase, carboxy-PTIO (an NO-trapping agent) or N-acetylcysteine, whereas hydroxyl radical scavengers such as dimethylsulfoxide, ethanol and D-mannitol did not show inhibitory effects. Possible mechanisms for this synergistic effect mediated by cigarette tar and NO are proposed, including involvement of peroxynitrite, which is a strong oxidant and nitrating agent formed rapidly by the reaction between NO and O2.-. NO is present in the gas phase of smoke and may be formed by a constitutive or inducible NO synthase in the lung, whereas O2.- is generated by auto-oxidation of polyhydroxyaromatic compounds such as catechol and 1,4-hydroquinone present in cigarette tar. Thus, potent reactive species including peroxynitrite formed by the interaction between cigarette tar and NO may play an important role in smoking-related diseases including
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Synergistic induction of DNA strand breakage by cigarette tar and nitric oxide. 923 Feb 80
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