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)

"Spontaneous" lung metastases develop in over 50% of the animals bearing subcutaneous isografts of WB-2054, a rat colon carcinoma. A metastatic variant has been developed by "Fidler" type in vivo selection, yielding 100% lung metastasis. In a five-week assay to test the organ specificity of this lung metastatic variant, however, "experimental" liver and lung metastases could be induced in 100% and 60% of animals on portal venous and intravenous injections, respectively. The results demonstrate selection of a metastatic variant from heterogeneous primary tumor, and suggest at least two interacting mechanisms: (1) mechanical (the anatomy of the blood-borne metastatic pathways) and (2) biologic (factors intrinsic to primary tumor subpopulations that can be selected for metastatic proclivity). In addition, liver metastases were successfully established from colon tumors induced by cecal wall injection of tumor cells. Such a spontaneous liver metastasis model will be useful to study the specific mechanisms involved during metastasis of colon cancer to the liver.
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PMID:Experimental liver metastasis. Implications of clonal proclivity and organ specificity. 291 Feb 47

Serum antibody reactivity to squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) was evaluated in 41 autologous serum-tumor cell line combinations using the protein A hemadsorption assay. Autologous antibody reactivity (median titer of 1:4) was detected in sera from 24 of the patients tested. In 10 cases autologous antibody reactivity could be detected only in undiluted serum precluding further analysis. Analysis of higher titer sera from one patient revealed antibodies that define an antigen expressed on autologous tumor cells cultured from both the primary tumor (UM-SCC-17A) and from a metastasis (UM-SCC-17B). Absorption analysis showed that this antigen was also expressed on 6 of 10 allogeneic SCCHN cell lines but not on autologous fibroblasts or on allogeneic melanoma cell lines. Due to the low titer of autologous antibody reactivity in most sera, we sought to determine if dissociation of immune complexes through acidification and ultrafiltration of serum might enhance detectable antibody reactivity as has been done in previous studies in melanoma. Twelve serum samples from eight patients were subjected to acid dissociation and ultrafiltration (AD-U). Only six of the untreated sera had detectable antibody reactivity against the autologous SCCHN cell line whereas following AD-U all 12 sera had enhanced IgG reactivity against autologous SCCHN. Specificity analysis of one serum sample after dissociation revealed that the antibody detected an antigen common to SCCHN cell lines as well as melanoma, glioma, renal, and colon carcinoma cell lines. Circulating immune complexes may provide a reservoir of antibody with potential diagnostic and therapeutic applications.
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PMID:Incidence of serum antibody reactivity to autologous head and neck cancer cell lines and augmentation of antibody reactivity following acid dissociation and ultrafiltration. 292 93

Messenger RNA levels of the c-fos, c-myc, c-Ha-ras and c-Ki-ras genes were studied in 39 tissue samples obtained from 17 patients undergoing surgery for colon carcinoma and other colon diseases. DNA extracted from the same samples was studied by Southern analysis. The tissues were tumors and grossly normal mucosa from each case and in some instances benign polyps and metastases. Our results indicate: (1) that 50% of cases studied show an increase in expression of at least one of the oncogenes studied; (2) that over-expression is not random, some cases over-expressing several of the genes studied; (3) that the expression pattern of the oncogenes studied varies between primary tumor and metastases; (4) that amplification is a rare event, being limited to one instance in which c-myc was amplified in a metastasis; (5) that cases which exhibit high levels of mRNA in one or more genes studied correlate with biologically aggressive tumors; and (6) that "non-expressors" are at higher risk for local recurrence based on correlations with mucin histochemistry.
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PMID:Prognostic implications of expression of the cellular genes myc, fos, Ha-ras and Ki-ras in colon carcinoma. 304 May 97

The effect of recombinant gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) on established human colon carcinoma cell lines as well as fresh tumor cells from colon carcinoma patients has been investigated with respect to growth inhibition, enhancement of HLA expression, and modulation of immunogenicity. A direct antiproliferative activity of IFN-gamma was observed in five of seven cell lines tested, with a reduction of [3H]thymidine incorporation between 30 and 90%. Depending on the cell line, the IFN-gamma doses required for maximal inhibition varied between 20 and 2 X 10(4) units/ml. Independent of this effect, IFN-gamma enhanced the expression of HLA-A,B,C antigens in all cells investigated and induced expression of HLA-DR in three of seven carcinoma cell lines. Antigenic modulation of Class I and II major histocompatibility complex antigens was paralleled by an enhancement of the in vitro immunogenicity in three of four established carcinoma lines and in three of three cases, using cells derived from primary tumor cultures. Induction or enhancement of both proliferative and cytolytic T-cell responses was obtained in allogeneic and in autologous mixed-lymphocyte tumor cell cultures.
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PMID:Differential gamma-interferon response of human colon carcinoma cells: inhibition of proliferation and modulation of immunogenicity as independent effects of gamma-interferon on tumor cell growth. 316 Apr 56

Hypercalcemia is associated with a few primary malignant neoplasms and with a variety of tumors that have spread by metastases. Hyperparathyroidism is a diagnosis that is usually not considered in these patients. At our institution, 18 patients with malignant tumors presented over a 6-year period with hypercalcemia caused by hyperparathyroidism. There were five men and 13 women with a mean age of 48 years (range 24-87 years). Primary tumors in these patients included colon carcinoma (four cases), breast carcinoma (four cases), lymphoma (four cases), thyroid carcinoma (four cases), Paget's disease (one case), and lung carcinoma (one case). Metastases of the primary tumor occurred in seven patients, and in 11 patients the tumor was not metastatic or recurrent. Serum levels of calcium, phosphate, and chloride averaged 11.8 mg/dl, and 100 mEq/liter, respectively. C-terminal parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels ranged from 300 to 1,900 pg/ml with an average of 1,150 pg/ml (normal 50-340 pg/ml). At operation, a single parathyroid adenoma was discovered in 15 patients, and four-gland hyperplasia was noted in three patients. In all cases, serum levels of calcium returned to normal after operation. We conclude that patients with malignant tumors and concomitant hypercalcemia should be evaluated for the possibility of hyperparathyroidism. In cases of primary hyperparathyroidism, elevated C-terminal PTH level should be diagnostic. If hyperparathyroidism is determined to be the cause of hypercalcemia, neck exploration and parathyroidectomy are indicated.
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PMID:Malignancy and concomitant primary hyperparathyroidism. 333 14

Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-binding cellular glycoproteins produced by HT-29 human colon carcinoma and its variant cells established from liver metastases in nude mice after intrasplenic injection were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. On 5.5% polyacrylamide gels five major sialoglycoproteins (approximate Mr 115,000, 145,000, 190,000, 450,000, and 740,000) reactive with WGA were common to the parental and metastatic sublines. There was an additional component of Mr approximately 900,000 that was prominent in cells established from liver metastases. Specific removal of sialic acid from the glycoproteins eliminated WGA binding, indicating that all the WGA-binding glycoproteins including the Mr 900,000 component were sialoglycoproteins. Smith degradation following mild acid hydrolysis resulted in formation of WGA-binding carbohydrate chains on Mr 115,000, 145,000, 190,000, and 900,000 components, but not on Mr 450,000 and 740,000 components, which indicated that these two sialoglycoproteins bore different oligosaccharides from the other sialoglycoproteins. The Mr 900,000 component was more prominent with HT-29 cells growing in nude mice than those growing in vitro. WGA binding to the Mr 900,000 component of metastasis-derived HT-29 cells growing in a nude mouse was higher than that of parental cells growing in nude mice. The expression in liver metastases derived from parental as well as metastatic cells was higher than the primary tumor growing in the spleen of the same mouse, indicating that the levels of Mr 900,000 sialoglycoprotein (SGP = 900) were regulated by intrinsic and environmental factors. The influence of organ microenvironmental factors was confirmed by analyzing sialoglycoproteins of HT-29 cells growing in the liver of a nude mouse following intrahepatic injection. Analyses of human colorectal carcinoma tissues and liver metastases revealed a polydisperse WGA-reactive high-molecular-weight component similar to that seen in tumors growing in nude mice. The mean value of WGA binding to high-molecular-weight glycoproteins in the primary tumors of stage B1 patients was smaller than that of all other primary tumors. Comparison of primary tumors with liver metastases from the same patients indicated that the level of SGP-900-like high-molecular-weight glycoproteins in metastases was not always higher than those in primary tumors.
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PMID:Differential expression of a sialoglycoprotein with an approximate molecular weight of 900,000 on metastatic human colon carcinoma cells growing in culture and in tumor tissues. 335 3

Endogenous sugar receptors of human tumors, supposedly involved in recognitive interactions and growth regulation, were comparatively analyzed from human metastases to lung and liver by affinity chromatography and subsequent sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These profiles of sugar receptors including Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent specificities to alpha- and beta-galactosides, alpha-mannosyl and alpha-fucosyl moieties from salt and detergent extracts were found to be significantly different from the profile of the corresponding normal tissue. Metastatic lesions to lung from three different types of primary tumors revealed primarily tumor-associated mannan- and galactoside-binding proteins, whereas different liver metastases showed a tendency towards preferential expression of additional beta-galactoside-binding proteins and, to a reduced extent, fucose-binding proteins. The patterns of two metastatic lesions to lung and liver from a similar primary tumor, a colon carcinoma, disclose significant differences. Each resembles the pattern of other metastases to the same target organ more than it resembles the pattern of metastatic lesions to the other target organ, derived from a similar primary tumor. Further analyses of two primary liver tumors underscore the significance of changes in such a pattern upon malignant transformation.
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PMID:Sugar receptors of different types in human metastases to lung and liver. 336 84

Between May 1980 and July 1983, the RTOG conducted a randomized prospective study comparing external radiation therapy and misonidazole to radiation therapy alone for patients with hepatic metastases. Two hundred fourteen patients were accessioned to this study of whom 187 were evaluable. Radiation therapy was delivered to the whole liver to a dose of 21.0 Gy in 7 fractions. Misonidazole was administered orally, 1.5 gm/m2 daily 4-6 hr before each treatment. Patients in the two treatment groups were evenly distributed with respect to stratification variables including primary site, extent of metastatic disease, and Karnofsky Performance Score (KPS). End points examined included amelioration of hepatic pain, improvement of KPS and alkaline phosphatase, decrease in liver and tumor size, and survival. The addition of misonidazole did not significantly improve the therapeutic response to radiation therapy in any of the parameters studied. Hepatic irradiation was effective in relieving abdominal pain with 80% of the symptomatic patients achieving improvement following therapy. Pain was completely relieved in 54% of these patients. Patients with liver metastases from colon carcinoma improved more frequently than those with metastases from other primary tumor sites (p = 0.02). Relief of pain occurred more frequently in patients treated with radiation therapy and misonidazole (87%) compared with radiation therapy alone (74%) (p = 0.08). Palliation of pain was prompt, occurring within a median of 1.7 weeks from the initiation of treatment, and 94% of patients who improved did so within 6 weeks of treatment. The median duration of response was 13.0 weeks in the symptomatic patients; 52% of those surviving 3 months remained improved. KPS improved in 28% of patients. Serial CT scans revealed a partial response in 7% and a marginal response in 13% of patients. One patient had a complete response to treatment. The median survival of patients treated in this series was 4.2 months with no difference between the two treatment groups. Patients with metastases from colon carcinoma and an initial KPS of 80 or more (48% of the patient population) had a median survival of 5.8 months with radiation therapy alone compared with 6.6 months with radiation therapy and misonidazole (p = 0.36). There was no significant treatment related morbidity. Radiation therapy remains an excellent palliative tool for the management of patients with symptomatic hepatic metastases. Further research must continue to identify new methods of selectivity enhancing the tumor response to radiation therapy.
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PMID:A comparison of misonidazole sensitized radiation therapy to radiation therapy alone for the palliation of hepatic metastases: results of a Radiation Therapy Oncology Group randomized prospective trial. 359 49

Platelet function following inoculation of chemically induced carcinoma was evaluated in the rat. The original line of tumor (NGW1) was obtained using N-methyl-N-nitrosoguanidine. After trypsin homogenation a cell suspension of 0.3 X 10(6) viable tumor cells was injected subserosally in the cecum of each animal. Controls received injections of equal volumes of 0.9% NaCl solution or trypsin. The animals were subjected to laparotomy 2, 4, and 6 weeks after inoculation. Platelet function was assessed in vivo by measuring bleeding time and blood loss during mesenteric vessel transection or liver resection upon laparotomy. Hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelet count, activated partial thromboplastin time, platelet aggregation, thromboxane B2, platelet factor 4, and fibrinogen levels were evaluated after sacrifice by exsanguination. Significant decrease in bleeding time and blood loss was observed in animals with local primary tumors as well as in rats with lymph node metastases. Hemoglobin and hematocrit were decreased in the presence of metastases. Platelet count was not changed. Activated partial thromboplastin time was not affected by the presence of tumor. Platelet aggregation in vitro was accelerated in the presence of primary tumor or lymph node metastases, as well as following addition of tumor cells to platelet suspensions. No changes in thromboxane B2 or platelet factor 4 could be registered. Fibrinogen levels were decreased in the presence of liver metastases. Enhancement of primary hemostasis and platelet function in the presence of colon carcinoma in the rat was demonstrated both in vivo and in vitro. Direct or indirect interaction of the tumor cell with thrombocytes may play a role in determining the metastatic potential of the neoplasm.
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PMID:Hemostasis following inoculation and during spreading of colon carcinoma in the rat. 375 13

In searching for a new approach to the systemic treatment of colorectal carcinoma, we have observed that certain lipophilic cationic compounds are accumulated and retained for a significantly longer period in the mitochondria of living carcinoma cells than in normal cells or sarcoma cells. We report the in vivo therapeutic effect of one of these compounds, dequalinium chloride, on the W163 rat colon carcinoma isograft, which grows rapidly in Wistar/Furth rats after primary tumor implantation, and which recurs rapidly after primary tumor resection. In the primary transplant model, tumors were implanted, and daily dequalinium chloride treatments were begun the following day in doses ranging from 1 to 10 mg/kg. In the recurrence model, isografts were implanted, allowed to grow for one week, and then all gross tumor was resected. Dequalinium chloride was administered in varying daily doses starting the day after resection. In both models, tumor was removed on day 11 after implantation or resection. At sublethal doses, dequalinium chloride significantly inhibited primary tumor growth to 60% that of controls and recurrent tumor growth to 50% that of controls. We propose that this unique biologic approach of targeting carcinoma mitochondria with lipophilic cationic compounds may provide a major new opportunity for treating colorectal carcinoma.
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PMID:Inhibition of rat colon tumor isograft growth with dequalinium chloride. 377 99


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