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Query: UMLS:C0279530 (
bone cancer
)
1,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Due to confusion between endosteal (bone surface) dose and average skeletal dose, ICRP 60 has substantially overestimated the risk of radiogenic
bone cancer
. This confusion apparently stems from an incorrect reading of the BEIR IV report, which does not clearly draw this distinction. It should also be noted that what appear to be summary numerical risk estimates for bone
sarcoma
induction in BEIR IV and BEIR V refer only to average skeletal dose as calculated for 224Ra.
...
PMID:Bone cancer risk estimates. 844 29
The study of
bone cancer
has been difficult in part due to a lack of appropriate in vitro osteosarcoma model systems. The development of such systems is essential if a clearer understanding of the biology of and mechanisms behind the formation and progression of bone cancers is to be obtained. We report here the development of an in vitro model system which demonstrates important characteristics generally associated with osteosarcoma. The chick periosteal osteogenesis model was infected with the Fujinami
Sarcoma
Virus (FSV) containing the v-fps oncogene which encodes for a P140gag-fps protein-tyrosine kinase. Under the appropriate conditions FSV infected cultures developed bone and cartilaginous tissues which showed histopathological findings consistent with osteosarcoma. Biochemical data indicating massive increases in alkaline phosphatase activity, protein content, 3H-Thymidine incorporation as well as expression of active P140gag-fps confirm that transformation has occurred in FSV infected cultures. This novel in vitro model system should prove most useful in the study of
bone cancer
.
...
PMID:In vitro transformation of osteoblasts: putative formation of osteosarcoma in vitro. 282 12
Two prepubertal sisters of American Indian origin developed osteosarcoma at 8 and 12 years of age. This familial occurrence, tumor onset prior to puberty, unusual tumor location in one who also had short stature, and ethnic background all suggest an inborn predisposition to
bone cancer
rather than a chance occurrence. Rearrangements involving chromosomes #13 and #14 were found in both the surviving proband and mother. Comparison of the arm ratio and prometaphase G-banding patterns of the rearranged chromosomes suggests either deletion of band 14q11.2 or pericentric inversion (with breakpoints at 13q12 and 14q11.2) in the proband's rearranged chromosome, but not in her mother's. Her mother, who had no malignancy, had a typical Robertsonian translocation [t(13;14)(p11;q11)]. Three previously reported children with chromosomal abnormalities developed osteosarcoma at unusually young ages, younger even than in reported sibships with osteosarcoma. The most frequently detected cytogenetic abnormalities in
sarcoma
tumor cells involve chromosomes #13 and #14. In addition, some cases of bilateral retinoblastoma and familial unilateral retinoblastoma, which are known to be at increased risk for osteosarcoma, are associated with tiny deletions on chromosome #13. Thus, there may be a causal relationship between constitutional loss or rearrangement of genetic material at these breakpoints on chromosomes #13 or #14 and development of osteosarcoma in this family that is similar to that seen in patients with small constitutional chromosomal deletions who develop Wilms' tumor and retinoblastoma.
...
PMID:Familial osteosarcoma associated with 13;14 chromosomal rearrangement. 385 64
Seventy skeletal malignancies in 44 dogs were identified among 117 beagles injected as young adults with graded dosages of approximately 0.07 to 104 kBq 241Am kg-1 and maintained for lifetime observation. All of these tumors were osteosarcomas except four fibrosarcomas of bone and four chondrosarcomas of bone. Of these 117 animals, 114 survived beyond the minimum age (of 2.79 y) for radiation-induced
bone cancer
, and all are now dead. An expression was derived that described the dependence of percent occurrence of bone
sarcoma
on skeletal radiation dose of A = 0.76 + 30D, where A = percent of dogs with skeletal malignancy within any dosage group, D = average skeletal dose (< 3 Gy) at 1 y before death (average skeletal dose was calculated to the presumed start of tumor growth, which we have taken to be 1 y before death), and 0.76 represents the lifetime percent malignant bone tumor response among 132 suitable control dogs in our colony not given any radioactivity. All dosage groups with skeletal doses of > 3 Gy at 1 y before death exhibited close to 100% occurrence and appeared to be beyond the region of linearity. Therefore, they were excluded from the derivation of this expression. Similar analysis of corresponding data for beagles given 226Ra as young adults, excluding the two highest dosage groups in which the bone tumor response was approximately 100%, yielded the expression, A = 0.76 + 4.7D, (D < 20 Gy). A ratio of the coefficients in these two expressions indicates the effectiveness at low radiation doses for bone-cancer induction of 241Am relative to 226Ra, or (30 +/- 2.6)(4.7 +/- 0.47)-1 = 6 +/- 0.8. This compares to the relative effectiveness at low radiation doses that was obtained earlier for a 239Pu:226Ra toxicity ratio of about 16 +/- 5.
...
PMID:Skeletal malignancies among beagles injected with 241Am. 828 58
Cancers seen and recorded between 1983 and 1995 in the Hospital Tumor Registry at the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC), one of the largest primary and tertiary care hospitals in Lebanon, were retrospectively reviewed and analyzed. There was a total of 10,220 cases, excluding 916 skin cancers other than skin melanoma, averaging 786 cases per year. There were 5086 cancer cases in males with the five most common cancers being: lung cancer (915 cases: 17.9%) followed by bladder cancer (503 cases: 9.8%), larynx (438 cases: 8.6%), lymphoma (393 cases: 7.7%) and leukemia (336 cases: 6.6%). As for female cancer cases, a total of 5134 cases were observed with the five most common cancers being: breast cancer (1821 cases), followed by cervical cancer (535 cases), colo-rectal cancer (256 cases: 4.9%), lymphoma (232 cases: 4.5%), and brain cancer (213 cases: 4.1%). The average age for all cancer cases was 50.5 years with a standard deviation (SD) of 18.8 years. The average age of females (48.8 yrs; SD 17.4) was relatively lower than that of males (52.2 yrs; SD 19.9) and the difference was statistically significant. 40.6% of the patients were under the age of 50 years. 49% of breast cancer patients were below 50 years of age. In children less than 15 years of age, there were 555 cases, with leukemia being the commonest (185 cases: 33.3% of childhood cases) followed by brain cancer (112 cases: 20.1%), lymphoma (63 cases: 11.3%),
bone cancer
(41 cases: 7.3%),
soft tissue sarcoma
(35 cases: 6.3%) and kidney cancer (28 cases: 5.0%). Lung cancer in males and breast cancer in females are the most common cancers in Lebanon. These cancers are amenable to prevention (cigarette cessation and anti-smoking campaigns for lung cancer) and early detection (screening, regular breast examination and mammography for breast cancer). Our paper emphasizes the importance of addressing those and other issues including bladder cancer and age at diagnosis of breast cancer. It also presents important epidemiological and historical reference data on cancer in Lebanon during the civil war and immediately after it.
...
PMID:Cancer in Lebanon: analysis of 10,220 cases from the American University of Beirut Medical Center. 979 15
Using data from the EUROCARE II database, relative survival rates for Europe were studied for adult patients with soft tissue sarcomas (STS) and bone cancers separately. Altogether 2,151 bone cancers and 5,845 STS were included. Survival analysis was carried out for each gender and the ratio between observed and expected survival calculated. One-year relative survival for
bone cancer
was 65% in men and 71% in women, and 5-year relative survival 45% in men and 51% in women. For STS 1-year relative survival was 78% for men and 79% for women and 5-year relative survival was 59% for both sexes. The variation in relative survival for
bone cancer
between countries was substantial, with the lowest rates seen in the Eastern countries. Denmark had the lowest rates of the Nordic countries, similar to those of Scotland. The variation in survival rates for STS was less pronounced, but still rates tended to be lower in Eastern European countries. The present analysis was carried out in the subset of European STS excluding visceral STS. To assess fully the international variation in survival a review of STS based on reported
sarcoma
morphology must be carried out.
...
PMID:Survival of adult patients with cancer of soft tissues or bone in Europe. EUROCARE Working Group. 1007 Feb 89
Low-grade intraosseous osteosarcoma is an uncommon form of
bone cancer
. It is occasionally difficult to recognize as a malignant tumor and is commonly misdiagnosed as a benign fibrous lesion. We retrospectively studied the records of 8 patients with low-grade intraosseous osteosarcoma in the files of the Tohoku Musculoskeletal Tumor Society in Japan. All tumors arose in the lower limb. The most common symptom was pain, with a duration exceeding 2 years in 4 patients. Radiologic findings, including those at magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), suggested malignancy in 5 lesions, whereas 3 were diagnosed as benign. Two patients initially presented with pathological fracture. The initial pathological diagnosis was malignant in 5 patients and benign in 3. All eight tumors were grade 1 in Broders' classification. The tumor showed a permeative pattern in all eight cases, but this pattern could not be confirmed in the multiple tiny fragments obtained as biopsy specimens in 3 cases. The number of silver-staining nucleolar organizer regions (AgNOR) per nucleus and MIB-1-positive rate were significantly higher in low-grade intraosseous osteosarcoma than in fibrous dysplasia, offering an advantage in differential diagnosis. Three patients (38%) developed high-grade
sarcoma
at the site of local recurrence after multiple intralesional excisions, and one of them died of the disease. The other 5 patients had a good clinical course after surgery with a wide margin. These findings indicate that preoperative diagnosis with radiologic investigation, including magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and histologic examination of biopsy specimens is essential in preparation for surgery with a wide margin, assuring a good clinical course, and the results of AgNOR and immunohistochemical MIB-1 staining might be helpful in differentiating low-grade intraosseous osteosarcoma from fibrous dysplasia.
...
PMID:Low-grade intraosseous osteosarcoma in northern Japan: advantage of AgNOR and MIB-1 staining in differential diagnosis. 1087 54
Bone cancer
pain most commonly occurs when tumors originating in breast, prostate, or lung metastasize to long bones, spinal vertebrae, and/or pelvis. Primary and metastatic cancers involving bone account for approximately 400,000 new cancer cases per year in the United States alone, and >70% of patients with advanced breast or prostate cancer have skeletal metastases. Whereas pain resulting from
bone cancer
can dramatically impact an individual's quality of life, very little is known about the mechanisms that generate and maintain this pain. To begin to define the mechanisms that give rise to advanced
bone cancer
pain, osteolytic 2472
sarcoma
cells or media were injected into the intramedullary space of the femur of C3H/HeJ mice, and the injection hole was sealed using dental amalgam, confining the tumor cells to the bone. Twelve days after injection of 2472 tumor cells, animals showed advanced tumor-induced bone destruction of the injected femur,
bone cancer
pain, and a stereotypic set of neurochemical changes in the spinal cord dorsal horn that receives sensory inputs from the affected femur. Administration of osteoprotegerin, a naturally secreted decoy receptor that inhibits osteoclast maturation and activity and induces osteoclast apoptosis, or vehicle was begun at 12 days, when significant bone destruction had already occurred, and administration was continued daily until day 21. Ongoing pain behaviors, movement-evoked pain behaviors, and bone destruction were assessed on days 10, 12, 14, 17, and 21. The neurochemistry of the spinal cord was evaluated at days 12 and 21. Results indicated that osteoprotegerin treatment halted further bone destruction, reduced ongoing and movement-evoked pain, and reversed several aspects of the neurochemical reorganization of the spinal cord. Thus, even in advanced stages of
bone cancer
, ongoing osteoclast activity appears to be involved in the generation and maintenance of ongoing and movement-evoked pain. Blockade of ongoing osteoclast activity appears to have the potential to reduce
bone cancer
pain in patients with advanced tumor-induced bone destruction.
...
PMID:Osteoprotegerin diminishes advanced bone cancer pain. 1135 23
We examined whether a herpes simplex virus vector that expresses human proenkephalin could be used to attenuate nociception in a model of
bone cancer
pain in mice. Osteolytic
sarcoma
cells were implanted into the medullary space of the right femur, followed by a subcutaneous inoculation of a replication-defective herpes simplex virus vector expressing human proenkephalin (vector SHPE) or a lacZ-expressing control vector (vector SHZ). SHPE-inoculated mice demonstrated a significant, naltrexone-reversible decrease in pain-related behavior assessed during open-field motor activity. These results suggest that gene transfer with an enkephalin-expressing vector may be used to treat pain resulting from cancer in bone.
...
PMID:Herpes vector-mediated expression of proenkephalin reduces bone cancer pain. 1240 68
More than half of all chronic cancer pain arises from metastases to bone, and
bone cancer
pain is one of the most difficult of all persistent pain states to fully control. Several tumor types including sarcomas and breast, prostate, and lung carcinomas grow in or preferentially metastasize to the skeleton where they proliferate, and induce significant bone remodeling, bone destruction, and cancer pain. Many of these tumors express the isoenzyme cycloxygenase-2 (COX-2), which is involved in the synthesis of prostaglandins. To begin to define the role COX-2 plays in driving
bone cancer
pain, we used an in vivo model where murine osteolytic 2472
sarcoma
cells were injected and confined to the intramedullary space of the femur in male C3HHeJ mice. After tumor implantation, mice develop ongoing and movement-evoked
bone cancer
pain-related behaviors, extensive tumor-induced bone resorption, infiltration of the marrow space by tumor cells, and stereotypic neurochemical alterations in the spinal cord reflective of a persistent pain state. Thus, after injection of tumor cells, bone destruction is first evident at day 6, and pain-related behaviors are maximal at day 14. A selective COX-2 inhibitor was administered either acutely [NS398; 100 mg/kg, i.p.] on day 14 or chronically in chow [MF. tricyclic; 0.015%, p.o.] from day 6 to day 14 after tumor implantation. Acute administration of a selective COX-2 inhibitor attenuated both ongoing and movement-evoked
bone cancer
pain, whereas chronic inhibition of COX-2 significantly reduced ongoing and movement-evoked pain behaviors, and reduced tumor burden, osteoclastogenesis, and bone destruction by >50%. The present results suggest that chronic administration of a COX-2 inhibitor blocks prostaglandin synthesis at multiple sites, and may have significant clinical utility in the management of
bone cancer
and
bone cancer
pain.
...
PMID:Simultaneous reduction in cancer pain, bone destruction, and tumor growth by selective inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2. 1249 78
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