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Query: UMLS:C0242379 (
lung cancer
)
71,905
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epidermal growth factor receptor
(EGF-R) expression was assessed in 63 lung tumour samples with a monoclonal antibody (EGF-R1) by indirect immunoperoxidase staining on cryostat sections. All 15 small cell lung cancer samples were negative whereas over 80% of the 48 non small
lung cancer
stained positively. In 30 bronchial biopsies two monoclonal antibodies against the cytoplasmic part of the EGF-R were evaluated. These antibodies showed weaker staining than EGF-R1. No additional or enhanced staining as compared with EGF-R1 was observed, suggesting a lack of enhanced expression of a truncated EGF-R analogous to the v-erb-B oncogene product. Monoclonal antibodies against the EGF-R may be helpful diagnostically in differentiating small cell from non small cell lung cancer and may also be important in elucidating biological differences in primary
lung cancer
.
...
PMID:Expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) in human lung tumours. 301 96
Epidermal growth factor receptor
(EGFr) is expressed in human bronchial epithelial cells, and non-small cell lung cancers express increased EGFr. Squamous metaplasia of the bronchial epithelium occurs in chronic smokers and is considered an early premalignant change. In this study, EGFr expression was examined in biopsies of histologically normal and metaplastic bronchial tissues obtained from 69 smokers who were enrolled in a randomized placebo-controlled chemoprevention trial. This trial tested the effects of 6 months of treatment with 13-cis retinoic acid (13cRA) on bronchial metaplasia. EGFr expression was examined as a marker of bronchial metaplasia and response to 13cRA treatment. In bronchial biopsies obtained from patients in this study, EGFr expression was higher in metaplastic biopsies than in normal biopsies (P = 0.02). Smoking cessation during treatment correlated with reduced metaplasia (P < 0.001) and EGFr expression (P = 0.02), but multivariate analysis suggested that this effect of smoking cessation on EGFr expression was dependent upon reversal of bronchial metaplasia. 13cRA treatment did not alter EGFr expression (P = 0.23). Baseline EGFr expression levels in metaplastic biopsies did not predict metaplasia reversal. This study demonstrated that increased EGFr expression is a biomarker of bronchial metaplasia, but it did not support the hypothesis that EGFr is a biomarker of retinoid response in
lung cancer
chemoprevention trials.
...
PMID:Increased epidermal growth factor receptor expression in metaplastic bronchial epithelium. 981 31
Lung cancer
, like many other epithelial malignancies, is thought to be the outcome of genetic and epigenetic changes that result in a constellation of phenotypic abnormalities in bronchial epithelium. These include morphologic epithelial dysplasia, angiogenesis, increased proliferative rate, and changes in expression of cell surface proteins, particularly overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) family proteins. The EFGR family is a group of four structurally similar tyrosine kinases (EGFR, HER2/neu, ErbB-3, and ErbB-4) that dimerize on binding with a number of ligands, including EGF and transforming growth factor alpha.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
overexpression is pronounced in virtually all squamous carcinomas and is also found in > or = 65% of large cell and adenocarcinomas. It is not expressed in situ by small cell lung carcinoma. Overexpression of EGFR is one of the earliest and most consistent abnormalities in bronchial epithelium of high-risk smokers. It is present at the stage of basal cell hyperplasia and persists through squamous metaplasia, dysplasia, and carcinoma in situ. Recent studies of the effect of inhibitors of receptor tyrosine kinases suggest that patterns of coexpression of multiple members of the EGFR family could be important in determining response. Intermediate endpoints of such trials could include monitoring of phosphorylation levels in signal transduction molecules downstream of the receptor dimers. These trials represent a new targeted approach to
lung cancer
treatment and chemoprevention that will require greater attention to molecular endpoints than required in past trials.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor receptor family in lung cancer and premalignancy. 1189 9
The prognostic value of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) for survival of patients with
lung cancer
remains controversial. The authors performed a systematic review of the literature in order to clarify its impact. Published studies were identified using an electronic search in order to aggregate the available survival results, after a methodological assessment using a scale specifically designed by the European
Lung Cancer
Working Party (ELCWP). To be eligible, a study had to have dealt with EGF-R assessment in
lung cancer
patients on the primary site and to have analysed survival according to EGF-R expression. Among the 16 eligible studies, 14 assessed any nonsmall-cell
lung cancer
(NSCLC) subtype, one adenocarcinoma only and one squamous-cell carcinoma only. The overall median quality score was 56.3%, with no significant difference either between studies assessable or not assessable for meta-analysis or between studies with significant and nonsignificant results. One individual trial reported a survival benefit for patients with EGF-R expression, three a survival disadvantage and 12 no statistically significant difference. Eleven studies (2,185 patients) provided sufficient data to allow a meta-analysis of the survival results. EGF-R expression positivity was determined according to the cut-off as determined by the authors. The meta-analysis showed that EGF-R expression was not a statistically significant prognostic factor for survival in NSCLC. In the subgroup of studies using immunohistochemistry, statistical tests reached a significant level against EGF-R.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
might be a poor prognostic factor for survival in nonsmall-cell
lung cancer
. The amplitude of the impact is small, however, and may be subject to publication bias.
...
PMID:The role of EGF-R expression on patient survival in lung cancer: a systematic review with meta-analysis. 1241 92
The statistics on
lung cancer
survival remain disappointing and form a powerful argument to develop new methods to control this most deadly form of cancer in both men and women. Chemoprevention is one of these new approaches. While carcinogens from cigarette smoke form an essential link between nicotine addiction and
lung cancer
, several investigations confirm that dietary and genetically determined factors play an important role in modulating the individual susceptibility and are linked to the chemoprevention approach. In spite of a large abundance of positive preclinical observations, most experiences with potential chemopreventive agents, such as retinoids and antioxidants in individuals at risk for
lung cancer
have been so far negative. Moreover, beta-carotene was associated with an increased
lung cancer
incidence in two large randomized studies, as a consequence of a negative interaction with smoking. On the other hand, recent progress in molecular biology has led to the discovery of specific approaches to chemoprevention and there considerable optimism regarding the potential of molecules and antibodies that target specific receptors or mutations.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
blocking agents, farnesyltransferase and cyclooxygenase inhibitors and 9-cis retinoic acid have been identified as promising candidates for studies in high risk populations. After more than 20 years of worldwide research, the prospects for effective
lung cancer
treatment are better than ever.
...
PMID:Chemoprevention of lung cancer: soon daily practice? 1259 53
This article reviews the concept of molecular-targeted therapy and the current development status of molecular-targeted agents for
lung cancer
.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
inhibitors have shown promising antitumor activity against cisplatin-resistant non-small cell lung cancer in phase II trials. Appropriate clinical evaluation of these agents and collaboration with basic researchers are essential for further development.
...
PMID:[Molecular-targeted therapy]. 1261 Aug 66
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a promising target for cancer therapy and a number of EGFR-targeted agents have been developed. Those most advanced in development are the EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors gefitinib ('Iressa', ZD1839) and erlotinib ('Tarceva', OSI-774), and the monoclonal antibody cetuximab ('Erbitux', IMC-C225). This review provides a clinical overview of these agents, highlighting their antitumour activities in different tumour types.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
-targeted agents are generally well tolerated and are not typically associated with the severe adverse events often seen with cytotoxic chemotherapy. Gefitinib is the agent with the most extensive clinical experience, particularly in non-small-cell
lung cancer
(NSCLC). Recently, gefitinib became the first-approved EGFR-targeted agent, for use in patients with previously treated advanced NSCLC in Japan, the USA and other countries. Further studies are required to explore the full potential of these novel agents either as monotherapy or combination therapy.
...
PMID:Gefitinib ('Iressa', ZD1839) and new epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors. 1476 Mar 65
Combination chemotherapy regimens have emerged as the standard approach in advanced non-small-cell
lung cancer
. Meta-analyses have demonstrated a 2-month increase in median survival after platinum-based therapy vs. best supportive care, and an absolute 10% improvement in the 1-year survival rate. Just as importantly, cytotoxic therapy has produced benefits in symptom control and quality of life. Newer agents, including the taxanes, vinorelbine, gemcitabine, and irinotecan, have expanded our therapeutic options in the treatment of advanced non-small-cell
lung cancer
. Despite their contributions, we have reached a therapeutic plateau, with response rates seldom exceeding 30-40% in cooperative group studies and 1-year survival rates stable between 30% and 40%. It is doubtful that substituting one agent for another in various combinations will lead to any further improvement in these rates. The thrust of current research has focused on targeted therapy, and epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition is one of the most promising clinical strategies.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
inhibitors currently under investigation include the small molecules gefitinib (Iressa, ZD1839) and erlotinib (Tarceva, OSI-774), as well as monoclonal antibodies such as cetuximab (IMC-225, Erbitux). Agents that have only begun to undergo clinical evaluation include CI-1033, an irreversible pan-erbB tyrosine kinase inhibitor, and PKI166 and GW572016, both examples of dual kinase inhibitors (inhibiting epidermal growth factor receptor and Her2). Preclinical models have demonstrated synergy for all these agents in combination with either chemotherapy or radiotherapy, leading to great enthusiasm regarding their ultimate contribution to
lung cancer
therapy. However, serious clinical challenges persist. These include the identification of the optimal dose(s); the proper integration of these agents into popular, established cytotoxic regimens; and the selection of the optimal setting(s) in which to test these compounds. Both gefitinib and erlotinib have shown clinical activity in pretreated, advanced non-small-cell
lung cancer
, but placebo-controlled randomized Phase III studies evaluating gefitinib in combination with standard cytotoxic therapy, to our chagrin, have failed to demonstrate a survival advantage compared with chemotherapy alone.
...
PMID:Emerging role of epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition in therapy for advanced malignancy: focus on NSCLC. 1496 61
Cyclooxygenase (Cox)-2 plays an important role in cell proliferation, carcinogenesis and tumor growth, in part through the synthesis of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) as well as through other yet unknown routes.
Epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
) signaling regulates Cox-2 expression, which has not been thoroughly examined in bronchial carcinomas. The current study examined the expression of Cox-2,
EGFR
, P53 and proliferative marker Ki-67 immunoreactivities by immunohistochemistry in 71 surgically removed stage I bronchial adenocarcinomas. Furthermore, we evaluated the prognostic value of these molecules to elucidate the biological significance of Cox-2 expression. Higher Cox-2 expression (more than 10% immunoreactivities in tumor cells) was strongly associated with higher
EGFR
and P53 expression as well as a Ki-67 LI above 20% (P < 0.01). Cox-2 and
EGFR
immunoreactive tumor cells showed a similar distribution pattern. Five-year survival rate was 73% in 57 cases showing higher Cox-2 expression and 100% in 14 cases showing lower expression, indicating a significant difference in survival (P = 0.040). Higher Cox-2 expression might be associated with tumor progression and worse prognosis through
EGFR
signaling interaction in Stage I bronchial adenocarcinomas.
Lung Cancer
2004 Aug
PMID:Co-expression of Cox-2 and EGFR in stage I human bronchial adenocarcinomas. 1524 87
Epidermal growth factor receptor
(
EGFR
) has become an important target in the treatment of cancer. Multiple epithelial cancers have been found to overexpress the receptor including head and neck, breast, colon, lung, prostate, kidney, ovary, brain, pancreas, and bladder. Strategies to block
EGFR
include development of monoclonal antibodies to
EGFR
, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, ligand-linked toxins, and antisense approaches. The inhibition of
EGFR
may lead to suppression of tumor proliferation and improve overall clinical outcome, as overexpression of the receptor has been associated with a poorer prognosis in patients with cancer. This article will focus on the monoclonal antibody cetuximab and its applications in the treatment of non-small-cell
lung cancer
.
Clin
Lung Cancer
2004 Dec
PMID:Cetuximab as a single agent or in combination with chemotherapy in lung cancer. 1563 64
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