Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0278488 (metastatic breast cancer)
7,812 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We investigated the outcomes of patients with breast cancer undergoing induction chemotherapy, mobilization of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) and high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) with PBSC infusion. One hundred and fourteen patients with untreated stage IV breast cancer, with a median age of 46 years (range 24-62), were entered on a phase II trial consisting of; (1) doxorubicin, 5-flurouracil, methotrexate (AFM) x 4 courses at 2 week intervals; (2) cyclophosphamide (4 g/m2), etoposide (600 mg/m2), cisplatin (105 mg/m2) (CEP), filgrastim (6 micrograms/kg/day) and PBSC collection; (3) cyclophosphamide (6 g/m2), thiotepa (500 mg/m2), carboplatin (800 mg/m2), (CTCb) followed by PBSC infusion. All patients received AFM, 107 (94%) received CEP, 93 (82%) received CTCb and PBSC as per protocol and 99 (87%) ultimately received HDC and PBSC. There was one infectious death after AFM and all other deaths were associated with progressive disease. Fifty-two patients (46%) are alive, 21 (18%) without progression, at a median 31 months (range 22-47). The probabilities of survival and progression-free survival at 3.5 years were 0.40 and 0.17, respectively. All 62 patients with visceral disease and/or a prior history of doxorubicin adjuvant therapy have relapsed or progressed. We conclude that the sequential administration of AFM, CEP and CTCb followed by PBSC resulted in long-term PFS only in patients who were NED, had bone-only disease or had lymph node or soft tissue disease with or without bone disease. Other strategies, aimed at improving responses to initial therapy, improving HDC regimens and/or developing immunomodulatory therapies, will be necessary to improve PFS for patients who fail doxorubicin adjuvant or who have visceral disease.
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PMID:Induction, mobilization of peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC), high-dose chemotherapy and PBSC infusion in patients with untreated stage IV breast cancer: outcomes by intent to treat analyses. 915 42

One of the most significant developments in medical oncology practice has been the approval of various antiangiogenic drugs for the treatment of a number of different malignancies. These drugs include bevacizumab (Avastin), the anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody. Thus far, bevacizumab appears to induce clinical benefit in patients who have advanced metastatic disease only or primarily when it is combined with conventional chemotherapy. The reasons for the chemo-enhancing effects of bevacizumab are unknown, and this is a subject that we have been actively studying along with additional ways that antiangiogenic drugs may be combined with chemotherapy. In this respect, we have focused much of our effort on metronomic low dose chemotherapy. We have been studying the hypothesis that some chemotherapy drugs at maximum tolerated doses or other cytotoxic- like drugs such as acute "vascular disrupting agents" (VDAs) can cause an acute mobilization of proangiogenic cells from the bone marrow which home to and colonize the treated tumors, thus accelerating their recovery. These cells include endothelial progenitor cells. This systemic process can be largely blocked by a targeted antiangiogenic drug, e.g. anti-VEGFR-2 antibodies. In addition, metronomic chemotherapy, i.e., close regular administration of chemotherapy drugs at low non-toxic doses with no breaks, over prolonged periods of time not only prevents the acute CEP bone marrow response, but can even target the cells. This potential antiangiogenic effect of metronomic chemotherapy can also be boosted by combination with a targeted antiangiogenic agent. Treatment combinations of metronomic chemotherapy and an antiangiogenic drug have moved into phase II clinical trial testing with particularly encouraging results thus far reported in metastatic breast and recurrent ovarian cancer. Oral chemotherapy drugs such as cyclophosphamide (CTX), methotrexate are the main chemotherapeutics used for such trials. Oral 5-FU prodrugs such as UFT would also appear to be highly suitable based on long term adjuvant therapy studies in patients. Recent preclinical results using metronomic cyclophosphamide and metronomic UFT in models of advanced metastatic breast cancer suggest that this type of combination might be particularly promising for metronomic chemotherapy in this indication, particularly when combined with a targeted antiangiogenic drug.
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PMID:Improving conventional or low dose metronomic chemotherapy with targeted antiangiogenic drugs. 1974 37

The study of proto-oncogene Her-2/neu using the fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique in routinely paraffin-embedded formalin-fixed tissue has become commonplace over the past decade and mandatory among invasive breast cancer expressing a score 2+ by immunohistochemical analysis of c-erbB2 protein. The patient's eligibility for treatment with the biological drug trastuzumab/herceptin is based on the evidence of a Her-2/neu proto-oncogene amplification (ratio Her-2/neu/CEP-17>2.2). However, although the exclusion is declared in the absence of Her-2/neu gene amplification (ratio Her-2/neu/CEP-17 <1.8) according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists recommendations, there are borderline cases (1.8<ratio Her-2/neu/CEP-17>2.2) that need to be investigated (eg, ductal carcinoma in situ with microinvasion, metastatic breast cancer). In such cases with Her-2/neu genetic heterogeneity it is difficult to count the nuclear signals in the areas of invasive tumor using fluorescence. The availability of a Fluorescence Immunophenotyping and Interphase Cytogenetics as a Tool for Investigation of Neoplasms technique, based on the simultaneous evaluation of immunostaining with anticytokeratins (CKAE1/AE3 and CK19), together with FISH for Her-2/neu gene status [it is therefore useful and of current applicability in breast cancer blocks (formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded)], permits a more easy identification of even single neoplastic cells by immunofluorescence and then a better evaluation of Her-2/neu status gene by the FISH technique, as shown in our study.
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PMID:Simultaneous fluorescence immunophenotyping and Her-2/neu genotyping (FICTION) in breast carcinoma candidates to target therapy. 2241 57