Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (primary tumor)
20,210 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred thirty-nine surgically treated patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland (MTC) were seen in our institution between January, 1926 and December, 1973. The incidence of this tumor among all thyroid cancers was 8%. Twenty-nine patients had the familial form of MTC; they were subclassified, on the basis of the phenotype, into a group of 15 patients with Sipple syndrome (or multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) Type 2A) and a group of 14 patients with mucosal-neuroma phenotype (or MEN type 2B). Better survivorship was seen in the younger patients, in those with bilateral tumors, in familial MTC, and in patients whose tumor was confined to the thyroid gland at the initial surgery. The incidence of tumor recurrence was 34%. However, in those with adequate surgical treatment, the recurrence was only 23%. The 5- and 10-year survivorships were 80% and 67%, respectively. The best chance of cure lies in early diagnosis through the use of immunoreactive calcitonin measurement in family members at risk, and an aggressive surgical attack on the primary tumor and any cervical metastases.
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PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland. 111 37

Thyroid carcinoma may invade the mediastinum by direct extension of the primary tumor or metastases to the paratracheal or retroclavicular-parajugular lymph nodes. From 1975 to 1991 in 47 out of 622 thyroid cancer patients (7.6%) [14 papillary (PTC), 5 follicular (FTC), 16 medullary (MTC) and 12 undifferentiated carcinoma (UTC)] transsternal tumor resection has been performed. Four patients (UTC three, MTC one) deceased 7, 8, 35, and 41 days after resection of the primary tumor due to cardiac or tumor disease, and in one patient because of acute arteriotracheal haemorrhage after external irradiation; no patient deceased after transsternal resection as a result of cervicomediastinal lymphadenectomy. At the time of primary operation 80% of patients showed an advanced tumor stage (greater than pT3). In 34% of patients (PTC 64%, FTC 40%, MTC 13%, UTC 25%) no tumor recurrence was observed neither by imaging nor by biochemical methods. In 18 patients a transsternal microdissection of all four cervicomediastinal lymph node compartments has been performed. Histological analyses of excised and tumor involved lymph nodes revealed in 9 patients unilateral cervical and mediastinal and in 9 patients bilateral cervical and mediastinal lymph node metastases. In the case of unilateral cervicomediastinal lymph node metastases 2 out of 2 patients with papillary and 2 out of 6 patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma could be cured surgically. In the case of bilateral cervicomediastinal lymph node metastases 3 out of 4 patients with papillary thyroid carcinoma, but no other thyroid cancer patient were free of disease. In conclusion, main indications for transsternal cervicomediastinal resection in thyroid carcinoma are (1) primary tumors extending to the upper mediastinum, but without lymph node metastases, and (2) thyroid carcinomas with unilateral cervicomediastinal lymph node metastases. In the case of bilateral cervicomediastinal lymph node metastases probable only papillary thyroid carcinomas are supposed to be curable by transsternal multicompartmentectomy.
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PMID:[Trans-sternal cervico-mediastinal primary tumor resection and lymphadenectomy in thyroid gland cancer]. 156 3

The human calcitonin gene generates 2 distinct mature mRNAs by alternative RNA processing, encoding calcitonin (CT) in thyroid C-cells or a neuropeptide (CGRP) in the brain. We evaluated quantitatively by in situ hybridization the expression of the CT gene in tissue section of 5 MTCs (2 sporadic and 3 familial forms). The primary tumor of one MTC was compared to a brain metastasis. In situ hybridization was carried out with tritiated cDNA probes coding for CT and CGRP mRNA. After autoradiography the number of silver grains was counted in 400 cells by computerized analysis of digitized images and expressed as the labelling level (L.L. = grain area/cell area per day of autoradiographic exposure). This was used to calculate the relative abundance per cell of the specific messengers studied, which depends on the autoradiographic efficiency and the specific activity of the probe used. The CT mRNA content was 3.25-6.55 10(-10) micrograms equivalents in the 3 familial forms of MTC and 4.95-9.25 10(-10) micrograms equivalents for the 2 sporadic forms. The levels of CT mRNA in the brain metastasis and in the primary tumor were identical (4.10 10(-10) micrograms equivalents). CGRP mRNA expression was weaker in the sporadic and in the familial thyroid tumors (0.60-1.65 10(-10) micrograms equivalents). The content of mRNA CGRP in the brain metastasis (0.60 10(-10) micrograms equivalents) was lower than that in the primary tumor (1.05 10(-10) micrograms equivalents).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Quantification of intracellular calcitonin gene transcripts in human medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) by in situ hybridization. 222 29

The value of radioiodinated metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) in imaging thyroid medullary carcinoma (MTC) was investigated (18 studies) in 12 patients with proven MTC. Calcitonin (CT), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA) were also determined. The patients were divided into two groups. Group I comprised 7 patients who had relapsed; two of them were also studied before total thyroidectomy. In the 2 cases studied before total thyroidectomy 123/131I-MIBG imaged the primary tumor (partially) and the residual tumor involved lobe. The residual/recurrent tumor present in 4 and some of the remote metastases in 3 out of 5 were detected. Group II includes 5 patients studied postoperatively with no evidence of disease. A residual tumor in one of the 2 patients without evidence of disease on the basis of conventional diagnostic modalities but with elevated tumor markers was visualized; the outcome was correctly negative in 3. One patient underwent treatment with 131I-MIBG. A total dose of 27.1 GBq (733 mCi) was given. Relief of pain and partial regression of the lesions was achieved.
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PMID:The possible use of radioiodinated metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) in medullary thyroid carcinoma. 248 94

Nine cases of medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland (MTC) are reported. Four of the carcinomas were of the familial type. Five of the patients were men and four were women. Patient age ranged from 23 to 66 years, with a mean age of 40 years. The median age of the four patients with the familial MTC was 32 years. A total or a subtotal thyroidectomy was performed in four and five patients, respectively, associated with a modified neck dissection in six patients with involved cervical lymph nodules. An underlying pheochromocytoma of the left adrenal was excised in one patient prior to thyroidectomy. In all cases the parathyroid glands were identified, and in two cases of familial MTC, in which they were grossly enlarged, the parathyroid glands were removed. Four patients died as a result of their disease within 3 years, whereas patients are well 4 to 12 years after surgery. The best chance of cure lies in early diagnosis and an aggressive surgical removal of the primary tumor and any cervical metastases.
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PMID:Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland. 357 51

Tumor cell subpopulations have been shown to be heterogeneous in a number of phenotypic characteristics, including responses to cytotoxic drugs. This phenotypic heterogeneity has been used here to study mechanisms associated with Adriamycin (doxorubicin HCl)-induced cytotoxicity. Clonogenic survival and alkaline elution methods were employed to examine the response of two tumor cell subpopulations to Adriamycin. The cells were derived from a primary 13762NF rat mammary adenocarcinoma (clone MTC) and a lung metastasis in the same animal (clone MTLn3). The MTC cells were significantly more resistant to Adriamycin than were the MTLn3 cells; the dose effective in reducing cell survival by 50% was 10-fold higher. Protein-associated DNA strand breakage assayed by alkaline elution was dose-dependent in both clones, and MTC cells were again more resistant to break induction than were MTLn3. These results showed that clonal tumor subpopulations isolated from a primary tumor and its metastases possessed different intrinsic survival responses to Adriamycin treatment in vitro and that this survival response correlated with Adriamycin-induced production of protein-associated DNA single-strand breaks.
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PMID:Survival of rat mammary tumor cell clones and DNA strand damage following adriamycin treatment. 379 58

Four 13762NF rat mammary adenocarcinoma clones were examined for their survival response to heating under conditions that induced transient thermal resistance (thermotolerance). Clones MTC and MTF7 were isolated from the subcutaneous locally growing tumor, whereas clones MTLn2 and MTLn3 were derived from spontaneous lung metastases. There was heterogeneity among these clones in thermotolerance induced by either fractionated 45 degrees C or continuous 42 degrees C heating, but the order of sensitivity was not necessarily the same. The clones developed thermal resistance at different rates and to different degrees within the same time intervals. There was heterogeneity between clones isolated from within either the primary site or metastatic lesions. However, clones derived from metastatic foci did not intrinsically acquire more or less thermotolerance to fractionated 45 degrees C or continuous 42 degrees C heating than did clones from the primary tumor. Further, there was no apparent relationship between any phenotypic properties that conferred more or less thermotolerance in vitro and any phenotypic properties that conferred enhanced metastatic success of these same clones by spontaneous (subcutaneous) or experimental (intravenous) routes in vivo. These tumor clones also differ in their karyotype, metastatic potential, cell surface features, sensitivity to x-irradiation and drugs, and ability to repair sublethal radiation damage. These results provide further credence to the concept that inherent heterogeneity within tumors may be as important in therapeutic success as other known modifiers of outcome such as site and treatment heterogeneity.
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PMID:Heterogeneity in induced thermal resistance of rat tumor cell clones. 664 62

Involvement of regional lymph nodes is extremely common in medullary carcinoma of the thyroid gland (MTC). The aim of the present study was to determinate the prognostic of MTC correlated with the regional lymph node involvement. From 1975 to 1994, 23 MTC patients were treated. The surgical protocol included a total thyroidectomy with bilateral dissection of the jugulocarotid chain and of the paratracheal groove. We have distinguished two groups: group N+ (histological lymph nodes involvement) and group N- (absence of histological lymph nodes involvement). In each group we have evaluated the prognostic significance of age, sex, palpable lymph nodes, histological capsular effraction and presence of distant metastasis. The data were analyzed with the exact Fisher test and comparisons by Student t test. Significance was defined as p > 0.05. Survical curves were based on the method of Kaplan Meier. In Group N+ (n = 15), 9/15 patients died: they had palpable lymph nodes, histological capsular effraction and distant synchronous or metachronous metastasis. The median survival was 8 months, when patients have distant metastasis. Six patients are alive, 2 with an elevated thyrocalcitonin level without metastasis, and 3 with resection of metastatic MCT to regional lymph nodes. In groupe N- (n = 8), all patients are alive: 2/8 patients had palpable lymph nodes, 1/8 had histological capsular effraction, but none had distant metastasis. 2 patients underwent resection of regional lymph metastasis and one of pulmonary metachronous metastasis. Gender did not appear to affect the lymph involvement. Factors significantly associated in the group N+ included the following: age (p = 0.003), palpable lymph nodes (p = 0.015), capsular effraction (p > 0.00025), distant synchronous metastasis (p < 0.013). The regional lymph node metastasis had significant influence on the 5-year survival, 48% vs 100% (p = 0.006), and on disease free survival, 16.6% vs 62.5% (p = 0.018). The median time from resection of the primary tumor to the development of metastasis disease was 37 months for patients N+ vs 169 months for patients N-. Involvement lymph node did not affect the metastasis disease, regional involvement or distant metastasis (p > 0.05).
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PMID:[Lymph node involvement and prognosis in medullary cancers of the thyroid gland]. 874 14

A large number of endocrine tumors express somatostatin receptors, and the use of radiolabeled somatostatin analogs has been recently introduced for their localization. Using in vivo scintigraphy with 111In-pentetreotide, primary tumor localizations were demonstrated in 3/3 carcinoids (2 intestinal carcinoids and 1 lung ACTH-secreting carcinoid; in 2 patients liver metastases larger than 1 cm were visualized), in 1/1 GH-secreting pituitary macroadenoma, and in 1/1 thyroid localization of MTC. Bone and/or lymph node metastases were imaged in 2/4 patients previously treated for MTC, with persistently high CT and CEA levels; in the other 2 patients the other scintigraphic techniques were also negative. Octreotide scintigraphy was negative in 2/2 insulinomas and in 2/2 ACT-producing pituitary adenomas. In 2 patients with carcinoid syndrome and 1 patient with Cushing syndrome due to ectopic ACTH, octreotide therapy induced a significant decrease in tumoral markers. Our preliminary data are in agreement with the results of larger series reported in literature: octreotide scintigraphy is a useful noninvasive tool to detect endocrine tumors expressing somatostatin receptors, particularly for carcinoids. It is of great use in the differential diagnosis of Cushing syndrome due to ectopic ACTH. Moreover, 111In-pentetreotide scintigraphy may be useful in selecting patients who may benefit from octreotide therapy to control hormonal hypersecretion effects.
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PMID:111In-octreotide scintigraphy in endocrine tumors. Preliminary data. 900 67

Annexin I is a phospholipid and actin binding protein which may play a role in signal transduction to the cytoskeleton. Previous work reported the differential expression of annexin I mRNA among rat adenocarcinoma cell lines of various metastatic potential (MTLn3, MTLn2, MTC.4: highest to lowest, respectively) (Pencil et al. 1993, Breast Cancer Res Treat, 25, 165-74). This relationship has been extended to the protein level in in vitro cultures using Western blotting and flow cytometry. Annexin I protein levels in MTLn3 cells are 3- to 5-fold higher than in MTC.4 cells. The weakly metastatic cell line MTLn2 shows levels 1.5- to 2.5-fold higher than MTC.4. In vivo tumors were produced by injecting 1 x 10(6) cells into mammary fat pads of syngeneic rats and necropsies were performed 40 days later. Semiquantitative immunohistochemical color image analysis was performed using a polyclonal rat annexin I specific antibody. Annexin I protein expression was highest in lung metastases of MTLn3, at 8-fold the levels observed in the MTC.4 primary tumors. MTLn3 cells in the primary tumor had an annexin I specific optical density 3-fold higher than that of cells in the MTC.4 primary tumor. MTLn2 primary tumors had an annexin I specific optical density 1.5-fold higher than MTC.4. A proportion of human mammary adenocarcinomas also have positive annexin I immunoreactivity, often with more uniform annexin I staining in the lymph node metastases. These results suggest that there may be survival advantages for nascent metastatic cells with high annexin I levels.
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PMID:Elevated levels of annexin I protein in vitro and in vivo in rat and human mammary adenocarcinoma. 951 92


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