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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reported paraneoplastic neurological syndromes (PNS) are rare disabling neurological diseases with supposed autoimmune pathogenesis. The aims of this study were to evaluate frequency, clinical course and therapeutic response in the cohort of PNS positive patients (n=10) in the Czech Republic for the first time. Second, we determined the presence and distribution of oligoclonal IgG bands (OB IgG) in PNS and compared the clinical and laboratory features of OB IgG positive and negative patients. A total of 2355 suspicious serum and/or
CSF
samples were screened by immunofluorescence and immunohistochemistry with definite confirmation by Western blot. OB IgG were detected by isoelectric focusing and immunoenzymatic staining and clinical status was scored according to modified Rankin scale (RS). Four patients had anti-Yo antibody, ovarian cancer and the score in range (2-5) on RS. Five patients had anti-Hu antibody, small cell lung cancer (SCLC),
prostate cancer
and the score between 1-4 grade on RS. One patient with SCLC and anti-Ri antibody had grade 2. Five of 10 patients with PNS had positive OB IgG and average value 4.2 on RS comparing with negative OB IgG patients with average value 2.6. Finally, we add well-defined cohort of PNS patients to emerging European profile of PNS and conclude that the presence of OB IgG in PNS seems to reflect enhanced immune response with more severe neurological damage and clinical course.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes - patients' cohort profile in the Czech Republic. 1149 21
We report a rare case of chronic eosinophilic leukemia (CEL) with a chromosomal abnormality of t(6;11)(q27;q23). The patient was diagnosed as having thyroid cancer with metastases to the lung and cervical lymph nodes in 1993. Percutaneous ethanol injection therapy (PEIT), total thyroidectomy, and radiotherapy were performed. The patient was also diagnosed as having
prostatic cancer
with bone metastasis in July 1999, and hormonal therapy was performed. At the time of the diagnosis of
prostatic cancer
, leukocytosis with eosinophilia was also revealed. Thereafter, cytogenetical analysis and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis of bone marrow showed t(6;11)(q27;q23) translocation and MLL/AF6 fusion products, respectively. No transcripts of the BCR/ABL chimeric gene were found by RT-PCR in bone marrow. Analysis of serum cytokines revealed a slight elevation of
GM-CSF
but no elevation of IL-3 or IL-5. Tissue damage due to infiltration of eosinophils was not observed throughout the clinical course. On the basis of the cytogenetic and molecular abnormality, the patient was diagnosed as having CEL, rather than reactive eosinophilia due to thyroid or
prostatic cancer
or other reactive inflammation. This is the first case report of CEL with t(6;11)(q27;q23) translocation.
...
PMID:Chronic eosinophilic leukemia with t(6;11)(q27;q23) translocation. 1166 8
Over the past 10 years, men with
prostate cancer
have received earlier diagnoses and are undergoing prostatectomy and/or radiation therapy with curative intent; however, many men have increasing prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels without evidence of local progression or metastatic disease during the first 2 years after definitive local therapy. Optimal treatment of men with PSA-only recurrent prostate cancer has not been established. This ongoing phase II trial is evaluating docetaxel (70 mg/m(2) administered intravenously over 1 hour on day 2 every 21 days for four cycles) and estramustine (10 mg/kg/d orally on days 1 to 5 every 21 days for four cycles) followed by bicalutamide and goserelin acetate in men with increasing PSA levels after prostatectomy and/or radiation therapy. Patients received pretreatment with dexamethasone, and after the third patient enrolled, patients received warfarin for prophylaxis against thrombosis.
Colony-stimulating factor
support was allowed. In preliminary results, 11 of 15 patients completed protocol chemotherapy; 12 of 15 patients achieved complete response (ie, normalization of PSA) after four cycles of chemotherapy. In addition, testosterone levels were reduced to the castrate range in all patients after chemotherapy. The regimen was generally well tolerated, and toxicities were mostly hematologic, with grade (3/4) neutropenia reported in approximately half of patients. Preliminary results of this phase II trial are encouraging, and enrollment is ongoing.
...
PMID:Docetaxel, estramustine, and short-term androgen withdrawal for patients with biochemical failure after definitive local therapy for prostate cancer. 1168 26
Dendritic cells (DC) acquire antigens through a number of cell surface structures including receptors for the Fc portion of immunoglobulins and mannose. Little is known about the effects of antigen uptake via these receptors on antigen processing and presentation. We compared the capacity of DC to generate CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses after exposure to prostate-specific antigen (PSA) alone, PSA targeted to the mannose receptor (mannosylated PSA (PSA-m)), or PSA targeted to Fc receptors by combining PSA with an anti-PSA antibody (AR47.47). Autologous CD3(+) T cells were added to monocyte-derived immature DC that had been cultured with
GM-CSF
/IL-4 for 4 days, exposed to antigen, and matured with CD40L or TNFalpha/IFN-alpha. After several rounds of stimulation, T cell responses were assessed by intracellular IFN-gamma production using flow cytometry. Both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell responses were observed after stimulation with DC exposed to the PSA/anti-PSA complexes, whereas CD4(+) predominated over CD8(+) T cell responses after stimulation with PSA-armed DC or PSA-m. These CD8(+) T cells responded when rechallenged with DC pulsed with HLA allele-restricted PSA peptides. These results indicate that PSA and PSA-m are processed primarily through pathways that favor HLA Class II presentation, while the PSA/anti-PSA immune complexes are processed through both Class I and Class II pathways in monocyte-derived DC. These findings have potential applications in designing more effective cancer vaccines for
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Generation of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T lymphocyte responses by dendritic cells armed with PSA/anti-PSA (antigen/antibody) complexes. 1172 19
Circulating T lymphocytes of patients with
prostate cancer
have been reported to have functional deficits, including low or absent zeta-chain expression. To determine whether these functional impairments could be reversed by prostate specific antigen-based vaccination therapy, 10 patients treated with recombinant human prostate specific antigen plus
GM-CSF
and eight others receiving prostate specific antigen plus oil emulsion in two pilot clinical trials were evaluated prior to and after vaccination for several immunologic end points, including zeta-chain expression and cytokine production by circulating T cells as well as the frequency of T cells able to respond to prostate specific antigen in ELISPOT assays. The flow cytometry assay for zeta-chain expression was standardized to allow for a reliable comparison of pre- vs post-vaccination samples. Prior to therapy, the patients were found to have significantly lower zeta-chain expression in circulating CD3(+) cells and a higher percentage of zeta-chain negative CD3(+) and CD4(+) cells than normal donors. The patients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells spontaneously produced more IL-10 ex vivo than those of normal controls. After vaccination, recovery of zeta-chain expression was observed in 50% of patients in both clinical trials. Also, spontaneous IL-10 secretion by peripheral blood mononuclear cells decreased following immunotherapy in patients treated with prostate specific antigen and
GM-CSF
. The frequency of prostate specific antigen-reactive T cells was detectable in 7 out of 18 patients vs 4 out of 18 patients prior to vaccination. Only one of 18 patients was a clinical responder. The vaccine had stimulatory effects on the patients' immune system, but post-vaccine immune recovery could not be correlated to progression-free survival in this small cohort of patients with
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Recovery of zeta-chain expression and changes in spontaneous IL-10 production after PSA-based vaccines in patients with prostate cancer. 1187 May 1
Transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) controls gene expression of a number of genes, including cytokines such as interleukin-6 (IL-6), granulocyte-macrophage (GM)-
CSF
, and interleukin-8 (IL-8). IL-6 is known to play important roles in the growth of
prostate cancer
cells, activation of androgen receptor, and prostate-specific protein expression. NF-kappaB is activated by extracellular signals such as proinflammatory cytokines, chemotherapeutic reagents, and radiation. Here we demonstrate that cisplatin (CDDP) and etoposide (VP-16) induce nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB in
prostate cancer
cell lines, followed by secretion of IL-6. We also demonstrated that the growth of hormone-independent
prostate cancer
cell lines can be inhibited by the anti-NF-kappaB reagent N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC). These observations indicate that NF-kappaB can be a target of new adjuvant therapy against hormone refractory prostate cancer.
...
PMID:N-acetyl-L-cysteine enhances chemotherapeutic effect on prostate cancer cells. 1194 26
Colony-stimulating factor
-1 receptor (CSF-1R) is the major regulator of macrophage development and is associated with epithelial cancers of the breast and ovary. Immunohistochemistry analysis of murine prostate development demonstrated epithelial expression of
CSF
-1R during the protrusion of prostatic buds from the urogenital sinus, during the prepubertal and androgen-driven proliferative expansion and branching of the gland, with a decline in older animals. Models of murine
prostate cancer
showed
CSF
-1R expression in areas of carcinoma- and tumor-associated macrophages. Several human
prostate cancer
cell lines and primary cultures of human prostate epithelial cells had low but detectable levels of
CSF
-1R. Human prostatectomy samples showed low or undetectable levels of receptor in normal glands or benign prostatic hypertrophy specimens. Staining was strongest in areas of prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia or carcinoma of Gleason histological grade 3 or 4. The activated form of the receptor reactive with antibodies specific for phosphotyrosine modified peptide sequences was observed in samples of metastatic
prostate cancer
. Immunohistochemistry showed strong expression of
CSF
-1R by macrophage lineage cells, including villous macrophages and the syncytiotrophoblast layer of placenta, Kupper cells in the liver, and histiocytes infiltrating near prostate cancers. These observations correlate
CSF
-1R expression with changes in the growth and development of the normal and neoplastic prostate.
...
PMID:Expression of colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor during prostate development and prostate cancer progression. 1238 83
Hormonotherapy is the standard treatment for advanced
prostate cancer
but disease progression ineluctably occurs. Subsequent chemotherapy has a modest symptomatic palliative role even if encouraging results were recently presented with docetaxel and estramustine combination. In this context, there is a great deal of interest in using dendritic cells therapeutically, as they are the most potent professional antigen-presenting cells in the immune system. Based on their unique adjuvant capacity, two vaccinal strategies are therefore tested in clinical trials. First approach includes the administration of cancer cells transduced by a cytokine gene to stimulate the in vivo recruitment and activation of dendritic cells, and the most advanced studies use
GM-CSF
gene-transduced allogenic cells. The second approach consists in infusions of dendritic cells loaded ex vivo with relevant tumoral antigens. Two prostate antigens have already been used. PSMA evaluated in 130 patients and a fusion protein PAP-
GM-CSF
(Provenge) in 144 patients. All treatments were well tolerated and frequently generated weak specific responses, but resulted in a limited clinical efficacy. However, engineering of dendritic cells can provide optimised cell vectors able to amplify vaccine response and clinical efficacy.
...
PMID:[Cell therapy and prostate cancer]. 1460 63
Gene-modified dendritic cells (DC) provide unique therapeutic strategies for
prostate cancer
; however, the comparative evaluation of specific delivery options using appropriate preclinical models has not been described. In this study, bone marrow-derived DC were genetically engineered to express high levels of interleukin-12 (IL-12) with or without the costimulatory molecule B7-1, by ex vivo infection with recombinant adenoviral vectors. We used an orthotopic metastatic mouse
prostate cancer
preclinical model (178-2 BMA) to compare two therapeutic protocols for DC delivery, in situ and subcutaneous. DC were generated from bone marrow of syngeneic 129/Sv mice by culturing in the presence of
GM-CSF
and IL-4. In vitro DC/IL-12 or DC/IL-12/B7 produced high levels of biologically active IL-12. In situ delivery of DC/IL-12 or DC/IL-12/B7 induced a significant suppression of primary tumor growth compared to DC/beta gal controls (P=.0328 and P=.0019, respectively), as well as reduced numbers of spontaneous lung metastatic nodules (P=.1404 and P=.0335, respectively). In survival experiments, in situ DC/IL-12 injection demonstrated a small but statistically significant advantage (P=.0041). Subcutaneous, tumor lysate pulsed DC/IL-12 significantly decreased tumor size (P=.0152) and increased survival (P=0.0433) compared to HBSS controls but the decrease in the number of spontaneous lung metastases did not achieve statistical significance. Both in situ and subcutaneous treatments enhanced cytolytic activities of natural killer (NK) cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). In this preclinical model, gene-modified DC-based intratumoral immunotherapy was shown to be an effective therapeutic strategy for locally advanced
prostate cancer
based on tumor growth suppression, inhibition of metastasis and survival improvement.
...
PMID:Route of administration influences the antitumor effects of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells engineered to produce interleukin-12 in a metastatic mouse prostate cancer model. 1504 61
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is a serine protease secreted at low levels by normal luminal epithelial cells of the prostate and in significantly higher levels by
prostate cancer
cells. Therefore, PSA is a potential target for various immunotherapeutical approaches against
prostate cancer
. DNA vaccination has been investigated as immunotherapy for infectious diseases in patients and for specific treatment of cancer in certain animal models. In animal studies, we have demonstrated that vaccination with plasmid vector pVAX/PSA results in PSA-specific cellular response and protection against tumour challenge. The purpose of the trial was to evaluate the safety, feasibility and biological efficacy of pVAX/PSA vaccine in the clinic. A phase I trial of pVAX/PSA, together with cytokine granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (Molgramostim) and IL-2 (Aldesleukin) as vaccine adjuvants, was carried out in patients with hormone-refractory
prostate cancer
. To evaluate the biologically active dose, the vaccine was administered during five cycles in doses of 100, 300 and 900 microg, with three patients in each cohort. Eight patients were evaluable. A PSA-specific cellular immune response, measured by IFN-gamma production against recombinant PSA protein, and a rise in anti-PSA IgG were detected in two of three patients after vaccination in the highest dose cohort. A decrease in the slope of PSA was observed in the two patients exhibiting IFN-gamma production to PSA. No adverse effects (WHO grade >2) were observed in any dose cohort. We demonstrate that DNA vaccination with a PSA-coding plasmid vector, given with GM-
CSF
and IL-2 to patients with
prostate cancer
, is safe and in doses of 900 microg the vaccine can induce cellular and humoral immune responses against PSA protein.
...
PMID:A phase I trial of DNA vaccination with a plasmid expressing prostate-specific antigen in patients with hormone-refractory prostate cancer. 1528 Sep 30
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