Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0598934 (tumor growth)
58,965 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Angiogenesis plays an important role both in progression of solid tumors and in metastasizing. An invasive growth of a neoplasm is mainly connected with appearing of blood vessels within a tumor. Inhibition of angiogenesis in solid neoplasms may deter both tumor growth and metastases. New treatment strategies based on suppressing of angiogenesis and selective damaging of neoplastic blood vessels may prove to be as efficient as those based on direct destruction of neoplastic cells. One of important angiogenic factors is vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which is produced by neoplastic cells and shows high promitotic activity almost entirely for endothelial cells (paracrine activity). We decided to investigate VEGF expression in precancerous lesions as well as in squamous cancers of vulva. Our material included 31 cases of vulvar squamous cancer, 28 cases of VIN (vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia) III, 10 VIN II cases and 12 VIN I cases. A diagnosis was established according to WHO criteria on the ground of post-operative histopathological examination complemented with proliferation index estimated by the use of MIB-1 antibody. Immunohistochemical examinations were performed on paraffin-embedded material, using MIB-1 antibody (Immunotech), VEGF antibody (Santa Cruz), Goat serum Normal (DAKO), DAKO StreptAB-Complex/HRP Duet, Mouse/Rabbit DAKO DAB Chromogen Tablets, TBS (Sigma). Positive cytoplasmic expression of anti-VEGF polyclonal antibody (diffuse and/or focal and of various intensity) was observed in almost all samples from precancerous and cancerous lesions. The expression was especially strong and diffuse in all cancer cases; in cases of VIN it was mainly focal and weak.
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PMID:Expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in vulvar squamous cancer and VIN. 1592 Oct 7

The use of chemotherapy has led to improved treatment outcome for some pediatric patients with medulloblastoma. We have used a pre-radiation chemotherapy regimen consisting of vincristine and CDDP. The 9L gliosarcoma implanted intracranially and subcutaneously in the same animals was used as a preclinical model system to assess the efficacy of treatment combinations including: vincristine, CDDP, cyclo-phosphamide, etanidazole and radiation. The experimental endpoints were percent increase-in-lifespan, tumor growth delay and tumor cell survival. Both the tumor growth delay and percent increase-in-lifespan improved as the number of agents included in the chemotherapy regimen increased. so that the chemotherapy regimen including all four agents (ETA/VIN/CDDP/CTX) resulted in the greatest tumor growth delay (23.6 +/- 1.5 days) and the greatest increase-in-lifespan (35.8%). When radiation (20 Gray, single dose) was added to the treatment regimens the combinations of ETA/CTX/X-ray and ETA/VIN/CDDP/CTX/X-ray resulted in equivalent tumor growth delays (25.2 +/- 1.3 days and 25.8 +/- 1.7 days, respectively), while the greatest increase-in-lifespan (39.1%) was obtained with the five agent combination. The response of the 9L gliosarcoma to CDDP and cyclophosphamide over a dosage range was very similar to that of the murine FSaII fibrosarcoma. Our results indicate that etanidazole may be an effective chemosensitizer of combination chemotherapy and combined modality treatment regimens for brain tumors.
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PMID:Etanidazole as a modulator of combined modality therapy in the rat 9l-gliosarcoma. 2158 91