Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0345904 (liver cancer)
15,188 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Forty patients with unresectable liver cancer were treated by hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy plus embolization (HAI+HAE). Thirty-four patients had huge masses and 6 nodular lesions. After HAI+HAE, the frequency of greater than or equal to 50% reduction in tumor size was 67.5% (27/40); that of reduction in marked and partial disappearance of tumor blood vessels was 90% (36/40); and that of marked decrease and normalized AFP was 90.3% (28/31). The mean survival of 12 patients treated solely by HAI plus HAE was 17.2 months, and one of them has been alive for 48 months. Twenty-eight patients became operable following HAI+HAE and 26 of them underwent hepatic resection. Pathologic examination revealed obvious necrosis in most part of the tumor with a few viable cancer cells in the periphery and inflammatory reaction as well as fibrotic proliferation around the necrotic tumor tissue. The authors believe that hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy plus embolization for the unresectable liver cancer is effective. If satisfactory shrinkage of the tumor is observed, subsequent resection should be contemplated for cure.
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PMID:[Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy plus embolization for unresectable liver cancer--a report on 40 patients]. 139 76

It has been reported that hepatoma (HCC) cells produce abnormal proteins such as erytropietin, fibrinogen, prothrombin, and, recently, antithrombin III (AT III). In a preliminary report, we reported increased AT III levels in patients bearing HCC independent of their clinical liver status. The present study was performed to assess antithrombin III levels and other serological data present in patients with cirrhosis and in patients with cirrhosis and clinical findings of neoplastic disease. In 70 well-matched patients (47 with cirrhosis and 23 with cirrhosis and proven HCC) serum total cholesterol, albumin, prothrombin, alkaline phosphatase, AFP, aminotransferases, and AT III were determined. Together with AFP and alkaline phosphatase, patients with HCC had higher values of AT III (88 +/- 7%) and total cholesterol (184 +/- 17 mg/100 ml), as compared with cirrhotic patients (AT III 56 +/- 3.6%; total cholesterol 113 +/- 5 mg/100 ml) (P less than 0.001). No difference was observed between these two groups for albumin, prothrombin, and aminotransferases. In HCC patients, AT III levels were related to the total cholesterol level (R2 = 0.317), whereas in the cirrhotic patients it correlated with the prothrombin level (R2 = 0.274). These data suggest that in HCC patients a greater rate of synthesis of AT III occurs, whereas in cirrhotic patients lower levels of AT III occur due to impaired synthesis or increased catabolism of the protein. The serial determination of AT III in cirrhotic patients as a means of detecting neoplastic transformation is suggested.
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PMID:Hepatocarcinoma in cirrhosis. Is antithrombin III a neoplastic marker? 164 42

The potential effects of free circulating antigen on the ability of monoclonal antibodies to target tumors in vivo were investigated. Tumor models consisted of HCC, NuE and PLC cell lines producing AFP xenografted in nude mice, and the NuE-treated mouse designated as the NuE-bearing mouse injected with AFP prior to the administration of antibody. Immunoscintigraphy and biodistribution were evaluated by using 125I-labeled monoclonal antibody 19F12 raised against AFP. Gel chromatography analysis of plasma from the PLC-bearing mouse which excreted 400 ng AFP/ml in blood injected with 125I-19F12 indicated that all injected antibody 19F12 formed an immune complex in plasma. No immune complex was present in plasma from the NuE-bearing mice, where blood AFP levels were 7 ng/ml, while the intact antibody was found to remain partly in plasma from the NuE-treated mouse. Radioactivities in the whole body of NuE-bearing and NuE-treated mice eventually cleared at the same rate. Our experimental results indicated that the endogeneous circulating antigen retained the antibody in the whole body for a longer period. The ability of monoclonal antibodies to target tumors was influenced not only by how much antigen was present but also by how rapid the antigen was cleared in the blood.
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PMID:Effects of circulating antigen on monoclonal antibody localization. 169 8

To elucidate the cell biological significance of ras oncogene, the expression of ras-p21 was analyzed in 53 cases of liver tissues including 34 cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), by using immunohistochemical method. In result, 22 (65%) cases of 34 HCC and 34 (79%) cases of 43 liver cirrhosis were positive for p21, whereas all of chronic hepatitis and normal livers were negative. Especially, comparative study between the expression of p21 and clinicopathological background of HCC revealed that p21 was prominently expressed in well differentiated form, nodular type, small liver cancer, and the cases showing AFP levels below 400 ng/ml. From these results, it was indicated that ras oncogene might play an important role in malignant transformation of hepatocytes or differentiation of HCC.
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PMID:[The expression of ras p21 product in hepatocellular carcinoma]. 170 Jan 76

The present study is based on the assay of four markers (AFP, CEA, TPA, Ca 19-9) using IRMA methods in 36 normal subjects, 44 cirrhosis and 66 HCC patients. Parametric and non parametric tests were used to test differences and correlations. ROC curves and discriminant functions were also elaborated. Normal 95% "cut-off" was determined by the "boostrap" method yielding: CEA 3.4 ng/ml; Ca 19-9 55 U/ml; TPA 58U/l and AFP 5.2 ng/ml. In HCC patients the values of the four markers were, on average, significantly different from those of normal subjects. However, only AFP and TPA exhibited high diagnostic accuracy (90%) for detection of the tumor. Higher than normal mean values for all markers were, also observed in cirrhotic patients. Only AFP yielded effective discrimination between HCC and cirrhosis. The positive prediction for the presence of the tumor on cirrhotic ground was 95% for AFP values higher than 18.5 ng/ml, with a 78% negative predictive value with a 6 ng/ml threshold. Association of AFP with TPA showed only a marginal diagnostic improvement. Results were not improved at all by combining CEA and Ca 19-9 with AFP and/or TPA. In conclusion, AFP is and remains the best marker for HCC and the only one effective in discriminating of HCC from cirrhosis. TPA may be considered a valid alternative if cirrhosis is not present. CEA and Ca19-9 are of no use.
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PMID:AFP, CEA, CA 19-9 and TPA in hepatocellular carcinoma. 170 5

Markers for hepatocellular cancer include the best and worst of cancer detection. Although hepatocellular cancer is relatively infrequent compared to other cancers in the western world, HCC has a very high incidence in parts of Asia and Africa. It is estimated to be one of the most common cancer worldwide. High risk factors for HCC include previous hepatitis B infection, heavy alcohol consumption, cirrhosis, and aflatoxin exposure. Alpha fetoprotein may be the best human cancer marker that appears in the serum, but levels of this marker are often not elevated until the tumor is beyond surgical treatment. No other serum or tissue marker is particularly useful. Screening of high-risk populations in China has detected previously undiagnosed HCC in 1,000 of 5 million individuals tested and has led to an increase in survival from 5.5 to 61.6% with surgical resection over those who are later diagnosed with HCC without screening. Elevations of AFP due to yolk sac tumors may be differentiated from those due to HCC on the basis of Concanavalin A reactivity. Immunodetection using radiolabeled anti-AFP and immunoscintigraphy have given inconsistent results that are not as sensitive as ultrasonography in detecting HCC in the liver. Various enzymes, isoenzymes, and other markers may be useful as adjuncts to diagnosis in selected cases, but are not generally as good as AFP alone. If a patient has an AFP-producing tumor, the serum levels of AFP provide an excellent means of monitoring its progression. If the serum AFP levels drop to normal and stay there, cure is almost certain. If, however, the serum AFP level does not fall at the normal catabolic rate after therapy, or subsequently rises, regrowth of metastases are indicated. Immunotherapy using anti-AFP has not been shown to induce remission, but experimental studies indicate that drug-conjugated anti-AFP is effective in inhibiting growth of AFP-producing tumors. Clinical trials using drug-conjugated anti-AFP are now underway. Monoclonal antibodies have not yet identified the "antigens" useful for the diagnosis or treatment of HCC, but epitopes identified by monoclonal antibodies have been studied experimentally in rats which indicate multiple cellular lineages to HCC in cases of experimental chemically induced hepatocarcinoma.
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PMID:Markers for hepatocellular carcinoma. 171 67

We have evaluated tumor-associated trypsin inhibitor (TATI) as a marker for pancreatic and hepatic cancer. Of the patients studied 52 had pancreatic cancer, 30 primary liver cancer, 32 chronic pancreatitis, 25 biliary tract inflammatory disease, and 28 liver cirrhosis. A considerable number of falsely elevated values were observed in benign biliary diseases and in chronic relapsing pancreatitis. In pancreatic cancer the sensitivity of TATI was 63% while that of CEA was 40% and of CA19-9 77%. TATI is a marker of pancreatic disease but it does not differentiate between pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer. In liver cancer TATI and AFP has similar sensitivity and specificity.
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PMID:Tumor-associated trypsin inhibitor in pancreatic diseases. 172 34

Hepatic inflammatory pseudotumor (HIP) is rare. To our knowledge, there have only been 27 cases reported since 1953. We studied additional five cases, male, aged 13-56 years, with a history of the disease of 20 days-1 year. Major complains were epigastric pain, fever of unknown causes, and epigastric mass. All five HIPs were solitary and surgically resected with a final diagnosis made pathologically. HIPs mimic the characters of liver cancer on ultrasonography and CT scanning, however, the following several points could be used to establish the diagnosis: patients with a long history of hepatic tumor still in a rather good condition; patients with no cirrhosis and negative AFP test results; tumors that are well encapsulated, etc. Surgical exploration should be attempted in all patients unless in those with poor risks in which steroid therapy may prove useful.
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PMID:[Hepatic inflammatory pseudotumor. A report of 5 cases]. 186 79

The results of ultrasound guided percutaneous fine needle biopsy in 183 cases of suspected abdominal space-occupying lesions are reported. The accuracy of fine needle biopsy was 84.1% (127/151) in malignant tumors and 96.6% (28/29) in benign tumors By B-ultrasonography, intratumoral injection of absolute alcohol was done in 17 cases of advanced hepatic cancer. The tumor markedly reduced in size from 12 x 12 cm to 3.5 x 3.5 cm in 1 case, reduced by half in 2 but enlarged again 1 month later, remained unchanged in 2 and progressed in the remaining patients. A 50% decrease in AFP was seen in 4 patients. Eleven cases of liver, kidney or ovarian cyst were treated by intracystic injection of absolute alcohol which led to progressive reduction even disappearance of the cyst. Intervention ultrasonography, being simple, safe, accurate and having less complications, is useful not only for diagnosis but also for treatment of diseases in the abdomen.
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PMID:[Intervention ultrasound in abdominal tumors--an analysis of 183 cases]. 207 49

HCC occurs infrequently in Western countries, with recent increases being reported in California and parts of Europe. Southeast Asia, Japan, and South Africa continue to have a high incidence of this tumor with HBV, cirrhosis, and the ingestion of aflatoxins being identified as probable risk factors. Although the majority of patients present with abdominal pain or mass indicative of extensive tumor, asymptomatic, small HCCs are being detected with increasing frequency. Early detection in high-risk individuals is best accomplished by screening with serum AFP determinations and liver ultrasonography. CT and arteriography are valuable preoperatively in defining anatomy and determining resectability. Five-year survival following resection for cure of HCC ranges from 20 to 40 per cent, with improved survival reported for small asymptomatic tumors. Resection of metastatic liver tumors from colorectal primaries results in 48 per cent 2-year and 24 per cent 5-year survivals, with an additional 5 per cent dying of recurrent cancer after 5 years. Although patients with simultaneous and metachronous metastases do equally well after resection, the presence of four or more individual deposits adversely affects survival. Hepatic artery ligation or embolization can produce a significant palliative reduction in total tumor mass in patients with unresectable liver metastases. Regional chemotherapy using implantable hepatic artery drug infusion pumps is promising, with reports of prolonged survival compared with historical controls. Regional hyperthermia, laser vaporization of tumor, and cryosurgical techniques may prove to have useful roles in the selective treatment of liver cancer in the future. Orthotopic liver transplantation has been successful primarily in those in whom the malignancy is found incidentally in the chronically diseased liver.
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PMID:Malignant tumors of the liver. 242 9


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