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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum melatonin was determined over 24 hours in 35 patients with breast cancer with either a fresh
primary tumor
(n = 23) or a secondary tumor (n = 12) and in 28 patients with untreated benign breast disease (controls) having a fibroadenoma (n = 10), fibrocystic mastopathy (n = 14), or other breast diseases (n = 4). Circadian rhythms existed in all groups with acrophases at 2 a.m. A 50% depression of peak and amplitude occurred in the group of patients with primary breast cancer compared with age-matched controls (P less than 0.001, P less than 0.01). The peak declined with increasing tumor size: 27% at Stage T1, 53% at T2 (P less than 0.001), and 73% at T3 (P less than 0.05). In contrast, patients with secondary breast cancer, particularly those receiving antiestrogen therapy, had a melatonin peak similar to controls. These results demonstrated a transient depression of pineal melatonin secretion in primary breast cancer and indicated a dynamic role of the pineal gland in malignancy. To investigate some endocrine effects of a depressed melatonin peak, the 24-hour rhythms of
prolactin
(
PRL
) and thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) were determined in patients with primary breast cancer and compared with patients with secondary breast cancer. The
PRL
had significant circadian rhythms in both groups; but acrophases occurred at midnight in patients with secondary breast cancer, and there were unusually high concentrations at noon in patients with primary breast cancer. Circadian rhythms were not seen for TSH, but the 24-hour average secretion was depressed by 45% (P less than 0.01) in patients with primary breast cancer. The abnormal concentrations of
PRL
and TSH in these patients could be due to a depressed melatonin peak normally serving as a central circadian synchronizer and modulator of the secretion of adenohypophysial hormones. Additionally, a positive correlation existed between the nocturnal melatonin peak and progesterone and androgen receptor concentrations in primary tumors indicating a direct involvement of melatonin in the growth control of breast cancer.
...
PMID:Stage-dependent depression of melatonin in patients with primary breast cancer. Correlation with prolactin, thyroid stimulating hormone, and steroid receptors. 273 89
75 patients with breast cancer born in 1935 or later and who were referred to the Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Lund from the Southern Health Care Region of Sweden from June 1984 to June 1985 participated in this study designed to compare the tumor size with the level of the plasma hormones --
prolactin
, progesterone, estradiol, and estrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PGR) from the
primary tumor
. Early oral contraceptive (OC) use also was considered. All tumors wereverified histopathologically. The patients with both stage I after conservative surgery and stage II breast cancer were given postoperative radiation therapy. The study patients represent 74% of all in this age group diagnosed in the region during the same time. Statistical analyses included adjustments for the menstrual cycle and age. Both univariate and multivariate tests were used. In 12 of 75 women hormone receptors were not analyzed either because of inadequate handling of specimens or because no tumor tissue had been sent to the receptor laboratry. There was a significant univariate correlation betwee the level of plasma
prolactin
and the tumor size. The correlation continued after adjustment for age in a multivariate analysis. Including the ratio between plasma
prolactin
and ER of the
primary tumor
in the multivariate model added highly significant information on tumor size. The correlation between tumor size and ER alone was weak. The correlations between tumor size and plasma estradiol, plasma progesterone, and PGR of the Primary tumor were all negligible. Also negligible were the correlations between the patient's menstrual cycle phase at the time of blood collection and the level of
prolactin
, the hormone receptor levels, and the phase of the menstrual cycle at which the operation was performed. The ratio of
prolactin
and ER was significantly greater for those patients who had started OC use before age 20 (10 patients) as compared with the rest of the patients (53 patients). The tumor size was greater for the early OC users. These findings could not be explained by smoking habits, use of hormones, or antipsychotic drugs at the time of diagnosis. Plasma estradiol and progesterone did not significantly relate to hormonal receptor concentrations or OC use. There was no strong correlation between porlactin and ER, and ER or
prolactin
was not significantly correlated with early OC use.
...
PMID:A biological marker, strongly associated with early oral contraceptive use, for the selection of a high risk group for premenopausal breast cancer. 374 39
The in vivo relationship was studied between these biochemical parameters which previous studies have separately implicated in the regression of hormone-dependent rat mammary tumors. Upon depletion of estrogen and suppression of
prolactin
levels by ovariectomy, there was a marked increase in the production of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)(fourfold) and in the cyclic AMP (cAMP) content (twofold) in the regressing 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene-induced primary tumors. These two parameters appeared to be coupled since, in addition to this correlation, PGE2 stimulated adenylate cyclase and raised cAMP levels in both this
primary tumor
system and in another hormone-dependent transplantable rat mammary tumor (MTW9-A). Furthermore both the sensitivity of the adenylate cyclase system to PGE2 and the number of membrane binding sites for PGE2 increased upon induction of regression in these tumors. Under conditions where PGE2 and cAMP were elevated, (i.e., in regressing, but not growing, hormone-dependent mammary tumors), there was significant phosphorylation in the intact tissue of a 75,000-dalton nuclear protein, which appeared to be identical to the regression-associated protein shown by Cho-Chung and co-workers to undergo increased phosphorylation in response to elevated cAMP levels.
...
PMID:Concurrent changes in growth-related biochemical parameters during regression of hormone-dependent rat mammary tumors. 631 51
A 49-yr-old woman presented with an extensive prolactinoma (serum PRL > 10,000 mU/L, normal range < 450 mU/L). Over a 5-yr period following transsphenoidal surgery and pituitary irradiation, she became increasingly resistant to high doses of bromocriptine and underwent transfrontal surgery followed by stereotactic radiotherapy. In spite of these treatments, serum
prolactin
estimations rose progressively to > 100,000 mU/L. Magnetic resonance imaging scanning demonstrated a massive cystic tumor invading the temporal lobes, extending into the cervical and thoracic spine, with metastases to cervical lymph nodes. High-dose cabergoline administration resulted in a 30% decrease in serum PRL. Octreotide was administered as a continuous sc infusion with a profound analgesic effect on facial pain but with no effect on tumor progression. She was treated with a course of chemotherapy consisting of carboplatin and etoposide without any noticeable effect. The patient died 6 months following chemotherapy. Immunocytochemical analysis demonstrated positive nuclear staining for WAF-1, Rb protein, c-myc, and p53 both in the original and metastatic tumors. The metastases but not the
primary tumor
stained for c-jun. Metastatic prolactinoma remains a therapeutic challenge. It is associated with a variable proto-oncogene expression, which may be coincidental or causal. Cabergoline had no advantage over bromocriptine. Octreotide relieved facial pain but did not alter tumor progression. An effective therapy for metastatic prolactinoma remains to be identified.
...
PMID:Metastatic prolactinoma: effect of octreotide, cabergoline, carboplatin and etoposide; immunocytochemical analysis of proto-oncogene expression. 928 27
A review of findings is given which relate to the levels of circulating melatonin as well as the urinary excretion of its main peripheral metabolite 6-sulphatoxymelatonin (aMT6s) in patients with different types of cancer as well as in tumor-bearing animals. Clinical results show that circulating melatonin tends to be depressed in patients with primary tumors of different histological types including both endocrine-dependent (mammary, endometrial, prostate cancer) and endocrine-independent tumors (lung, gastric, colorectal cancer). Reduction of melatonin is most pronounced in patients with advanced localized primary tumors, such as mammary and prostate cancer where a clear negative correlation with tumor-size exists. The phenomenon of a reduction of circulating melatonin appears to be a transient one since patients with recidives show a normalization of melatonin. Surgical removal of the
primary tumor
does, however, not lead to normalization indicating that complex systemic changes appear to be involved in the down-regulation of melatonin. It is unclear at present, whether circulating melatonin is depleted in cancer patients due to a reduced production by the pineal gland or due to certain peripheral metabolic processes, although no evidence for an enhanced hepatic degradation to aMT6s, the main peripheral metabolite of melatonin, was found. The reduction of circulating melatonin is accompanied by neuroendocrine changes affecting the circadian secretion of the adenohypophyseal hormones
prolactin
, somatotropin and thyroid-stimulating hormone. In contrast to the above-described types of tumors many patients with ovarian cancer show highly elevated levels of melatonin perhaps due to the production of tissue-specific growth factors that could affect pineal melatonin secretion. Experiments with tumor-bearing animals clearly demonstrate that nocturnal circulating melatonin is modulated due to malignant growth. Detailed investigations with chemically induced mammary tumors in rats and serial transplants derived thereof show that slow-growing and well-differentiated tumors containing epithelial cell elements (adenocarcinomas and carcinosarcomas) lead to an enhanced production of melatonin involving activation of the rate-limiting enzyme of pineal melatonin biosynthesis (serotonin N-acetyltransferase) probably due to elevation of the sympathetic tone in response to a stimulation of the cellular immune system by malignant growth. As opposed to that nocturnal melatonin is depleted in animals with fast-growing mammary tumor transplants when myoepithelial-mesenchymal conversion leads to pure sarcomas. The reduction of melatonin appears to be due to either a reduced availability of the precursor amino acid tryptophan because of a glucocorticoid-induced activation of the hepatic enzyme tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase or a direct peripheral degradation of melatonin via indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase expressed in tumor and/or other tissues. The significance of these clinical and experimental findings relating to melatonin is discussed both in terms of their practical application as a possible tumor marker and from a theoretical point of view to understand better the mechanisms involved in complex host-tumor interactions involving the neuroimmunoendocrine network.
...
PMID:Melatonin in cancer patients and in tumor-bearing animals. 1072 Oct 63
We herein describe a 40-year-old woman with hyperprolactinemia, an empty sella and two extrasellar intracranial recurrent tumors which were revealed 23 years after the first transfrontal craniotomy and 18 years after the second transfrontal surgery and irradiation to a provable
prolactin
-producing pituitary macroadenoma. One recurrent tumor was in the right orbital apex causing right oculomotor nerve palsy, and the other tumor was in the right apex partispetrosae and foramen jugulare. Although her serum
prolactin
level decreased after the administration of bromocriptine mesilate, and the size of the two tumors remained unchanged, a malignant fibrous histiocytoma, which might have been induced by the irradiation 18 years before, grew rapidly in the right suprasellar-prepontine cistern to the right pedunculus cerebralis, leading to a poor prognosis. This case confirmed the importance of the life-lasting follow-up of pituitary adenomas treated with surgery and/or irradiation therapy. Not only ectopic recurrence of the
primary tumor
but also post-irradiation tumors may become apparent long after the removal of the
primary tumor
.
...
PMID:Multiple intracranial recurrent tumors with hyperprolactinemia combined with a parasellar malignant fibrous histiocytoma long after transfrontal surgery and irradiation to a pituitary adenoma. 1143 70
Pituitary carcinomas are defined by their metastatic growth. Most of them also invade into surrounding tissues. They should be classified by the site of their metastases (cerebrospinal, systemic, or combined) and by the presumable cell type of origin, respectively with the hormone being demonstrable by immunohistochemistry (adrenocorticotrophic hormone [ACTH],
prolactin
[PRL], growth hormone [GH], hormone-negative). Pituitary carcinomas develop from invasive adenomas. Nearly all tumors had been treated by surgery or X-ray before they metastasized. Since 1976, 37 cases demonstrated with modern methods were reported: 23 had metastasized into the brain or meninges, 10 showed extracerebral metastases, and 4 showed both types of metastases. In our collection of pituitary tumors, three carcinomas (0.13%) were identified: two with systemic metastases (one ACTH secreting and one PRL secreting) and one with meningeal dissemination and ACTH production. The diagnosis of pituitary carcinomas should be based on four criteria: a demonstrable metastasis, identification of the
primary tumor
as a pituitary tumor, similarity between the structure and immunohistological marker expression of metastasis and
primary tumor
, and exclusion of an alternative
primary tumor
.
...
PMID:Pituitary Carcinomas. 1211 77
Tumors metastatic to the pituitary gland are an unusual complication of systemic cancer typically seen in elderly patients with diffuse malignant disease. Breast and lung are the commonest sites of the
primary tumor
, whereas diabetes insipidus is the most frequent symptom at presentation. Their rarity and usually indolent course, as well as the lack of specific clinical and radiological features, impede their differentiation from other more common sellar area lesions, particularly when history of malignancy is absent. Management of these patients may also be very difficult because the prognosis depends on the course of the primary neoplasm. A 68-yr-old man, with no history of malignancy, presented with recent onset of hypopituitarism, mild diabetes insipidus, headaches, left oculomotor nerve palsy, and progressive bilateral deterioration of visual acuity and visual fields. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large sellar mass compressing the optic chiasm and invading the left cavernous sinus, whereas a
prolactin
elevation at 438.6 ng/ml (19.73 nmol/liter) was noted. Decompression of the sellar region was attempted, and pathology disclosed a metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma. On postoperative investigation, primary liver tumor was identified and confirmed by biopsy. The patient improved transiently but died 3 months after diagnosis because of deterioration of the liver disease. The relevant literature is reviewed in light of this unusual case, illustrating the problems in the diagnosis and management of patients with metastasis to the pituitary.
...
PMID:Tumors metastatic to the pituitary gland: case report and literature review. 1476 64
The 16-kDa angiostatic N-terminal fragment of human
prolactin
(16K hPRL) has been reported to be a new potent anticancer compound. This protein has already proven its efficiency in several mouse tumor models in which it prevented tumor-induced angiogenesis and delayed tumor growth. In addition to angiogenesis, tumors also stimulate the formation of lymphatic vessels, which contribute to tumor cell dissemination and metastasis. However, the role of 16K hPRL in tumor-induced lymphangiogenesis has never been investigated. We establish in vitro that 16K hPRL induces apoptosis and inhibits proliferation, migration, and tube formation of human dermal lymphatic microvascular endothelial cells. In addition, in a B16F10 melanoma mouse model, we found a decreased number of lymphatic vessels in the
primary tumor
and in the sentinel lymph nodes after 16K hPRL treatment. This decrease is accompanied by a significant diminished expression of lymphangiogenic markers in primary tumors and sentinel lymph nodes as determined by quantitative RT-PCR. These results suggest, for the first time, that 16K hPRL is a lymphangiostatic as well as an angiostatic agent with antitumor properties.
...
PMID:The angiostatic protein 16K human prolactin significantly prevents tumor-induced lymphangiogenesis by affecting lymphatic endothelial cells. 2186 22
This is the first reported case of pineal lymphoma with concomitant
prolactin
-producing pituitary adenoma.A 51-year-old male experienced worsening headaches accompanied by nausea, diplopia, and memory loss for 1 month. Cranial nerve examination revealed bilateral upward gaze limitation with convergence impairment, which is known as Parinaud syndrome. Magnetic resonance images revealed a mass in the pineal gland with a coexisting mass within the enlarged sella fossa. Hormone analysis revealed hyperprolactinemia. The pineal mass was removed without injuring the hypothalamus, brain stem, or any neighboring vessels. Pathology examination confirmed the diagnosis of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) involving the pineal gland. After further studies, the pineal lymphoma was determined to be a secondary tumor from a gastric
primary tumor
. The patient died 6 months after diagnosis due to systemic progression of DLBCL.Although the mechanistic link between hyperprolactinemia and lymphoma progression has not been clarified on a clinical basis, high
prolactin
levels may contribute to the rapid progression and therapeutic resistance of the lymphoma.
...
PMID:Pineal Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Concomitant With Pituitary Prolactinoma: Possible Correlation Between 2 Distinguished Pathologies: A Case Report. 2693 37
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