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)

To facilitate the differential diagnosis of poorly differentiated metastatic carcinomas of unknown primary site, we evaluated p63 and cytokeratin (CK) 5/6 as immunohistochemical markers for squamous cell carcinomas. The study cases were as follows: squamous cell carcinoma of the lungs, head/neck, esophagus, cervix uteri, or anal canal, 73; non-squamous cell carcinomas of various primary sites, 141; and urothelial carcinoma, 20. We also tested 14 malignant mesotheliomas. Immunoreactivity for p63 was as follows: squamous cell carcinomas, 59 (81%); urothelial carcinoma, 14 (70%), most often with diffuse staining patterns; non-squamous cell carcinomas, 20 (14.2%), resulting in a specificity of 0.86 of p63 for squamous cell carcinomas. Coexpression of p63 and CK5/6 had a sensitivity of 0.77 and a specificity of 0.96 for squamous cell carcinomas. Increasing the minimal criterion of positive immunostaining for both markers to more than 50% of immunoreactive tumor cells resulted in a specificity of 0.99, although the sensitivity diminished to 0.66. All malignant mesotheliomas were negative for p63. Our data suggest that positive immunostaining for both p63 and CK5/6 in poorly differentiated metastatic carcinomas is highly predictive of a primary tumor of squamous epithelial origin.
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PMID:Value of p63 and cytokeratin 5/6 as immunohistochemical markers for the differential diagnosis of poorly differentiated and undifferentiated carcinomas. 1176 70

Bone marrow is a major homing site for circulating epithelial tumor cells. The present study was aimed to assess the proliferative capacity of occult metastatic cells in bone marrow of patients with operable solid tumors especially with regard to their clinical outcome. We obtained bone marrow aspirates from 153 patients with carcinomas of the prostate (n = 46), breast (n = 45), colon (n = 33), and kidney (n = 29). Most of the patients (87%) had primary disease with no clinical signs of overt metastases [tumor-node-metastasis (TNM)-stage UICC (Union Internationale Contre le Cancer) I-III]. After bone marrow was cultured for 21-102 days under special cell culture conditions, viable epithelial cells were detected by cytokeratin staining in 124 patients (81%). The cultured epithelial cells harbored Ki-ras2 mutations and numerical chromosomal aberrations. The highest median number of expanded tumor cells was observed in prostate cancer (2,619 per flask). There was a significant positive correlation between the number of expanded tumor cells and the UICC-stage of the patients (P = 0.03) or the presence of overt metastases (P = 0.04). Moreover, a strong expansion of tumor cells was correlated to an increased rate of cancer-related deaths (P = 0.007) and a reduced survival of the patients (P = 0.006). In conclusion, the majority of cancer patients have viable tumor cells in their bone marrow at primary tumor diagnosis, and the proliferative potential of these cells determines the clinical outcome.
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PMID:Heterogeneous proliferative potential of occult metastatic cells in bone marrow of patients with solid epithelial tumors. 1185 19

Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor (ES/PNET) is an extraordinarily rare primary tumor in the kidney and can be mistaken for a variety of other round cell tumors, including blastema-predominant Wilms' tumor (WT). Approximately 90% of ES/PNET have a specific t(11;22), which results in a chimeric EWS-FLI-1 protein. Immunohistochemistry for the carboxy-terminus of FLI-1 is sensitive and highly specific for the diagnosis of ES/PNET. WT-1, the WT-associated tumor suppressor gene, is overexpressed in WT but not in ES/PNET. No study has examined FLI-1 or WT-1 expression in renal ES/PNET. The clinicopathologic features of 11 renal ES/PNET were studied along with immunohistochemistry for cytokeratin, desmin, CD99, FLI-1, and WT-1. WT were also immunostained for CD99 (5 cases), FLI-1 (10 cases), and WT-1 (9 cases). The patients (6 men, 5 women) ranged from 18 to 49 years of age (mean, 34 yr). The mean tumor size was 11.8 +/- 3.8 cm (mean +/- standard deviation). Presenting symptoms included abdominal/flank pain and/or hematuria. Grossly, all tumors showed necrosis and hemorrhage, and 4 had cystic change. Microscopically, all tumors showed vaguely lobular growth, primitive round cells, and variable rosette formation. Epithelial, myogenous, or cartilaginous differentiation was not seen. Immunohistochemical results on the renal ES/PNET were cytokeratin (2/8 focal), desmin (0/9), CD99 (8/8), FLI-1 (5/8), and WT-1 (0/8). In comparison, the WT only rarely expressed CD99 (1/5) and did not express FLI-1 (0/10), but were usually WT-1-positive (7/9). Follow-up on 8 cases (mean, 28 mo; range, 6-64 mo) showed 4 lung and pleural metastases, 1 bone metastasis, liver metastasis, 2 local recurrences, and 5 deaths from disease (median time to death, 16.8 mo). No case had distant metastatic disease at presentation. Adjuvant therapy included chemotherapy (8 cases), radiation (3 cases), and bone marrow transplantation (1 case). Our study affirms a unique proclivity of renal ES/PNET for young adults and that it is a highly aggressive neoplasm, with rapid death in many cases, usually after the development of treatment-resistant lung metastases. These tumors must be distinguished from blastema-predominant WT and other primitive renal tumors that require different therapy. FLI-1 and WT-1 immunohistochemistry may be valuable in this differential diagnosis, given the known immunophenotypic overlap between ES/PNET and blastema-predominant WT with regard to CD99, cytokeratin, and desmin. The accurate distinction between these two entities has clear prognostic and therapeutic implications.
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PMID:Primary Ewing's sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor of the kidney: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 11 cases. 1288 55

A case of cholestasis due to a synchronous pancreatic head metastasis from an occult lobular breast carcinoma is presented. The patient had a clinical and radiological picture compatible with a pancreatic head primary tumor with cholestasis and ascites. Ultrasonographically guided fine needle aspiration cytology demonstrated a metastatic breast lobular cancer (positive for cytokeratin AE1 and AE3, cytokeratin 7 and epithelial membrane antigen and negative for cytokeratin 20, CA 19.9, CA 125, CEA and estrogenic receptors). The same cytologic findings were observed in skin and subcutaneous armpit nodules. Clinical and radiological breast examination was unable to demonstrate any tumor in the breast. Pancreatic metastases are rare events and the majority of them are secondary to renal and lung cancer and rarely to breast cancer. In these latter cases, metastases are usually disclosed after a disease-free interval of months or years between primary tumor resection and recognition of the pancreatic tumor. Synchronous presentation is extremely rare. Metastases of epithelial origin are uncommon in pancreas and generally are first misdiagnosed as primary pancreatic cancer. Fine needle aspiration is a useful tool for the differential diagnosis in patients with widespread disease.
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PMID:[Pancreatic tumor: an unusual presentation of an occult breast carcinoma]. 1187 67

Although only less than 10% of women with primary breast cancer have clinicopathologic signs of overt metastases, metastatic relapse occurs in about half of the cases with apparently localized tumors within five years after surgery. In 23% of the patients, bone marrow metastases are detectable at first relapse and this rate even increases in patients with metastatic breast cancer. However, hematogeneous or lymphatic spread of occult tumor cells can arise before diagnosis at an early stage of primary tumor growth and is regularly underestimated by currently available clinical and pathologic staging procedures. We studied cytokeratin-positive (CK+) cells in the bone marrow (BM) and tumor markers in the blood of 128 patients with primary breast cancer in order to obtain an early diagnosis of residual disease. In a second study, we monitored cytokeratin (CK)/17-1A positive cells in the BM and peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) to evaluate whether dose intensive or high-dose (HD)-chemotherapy can eliminate micrometastases in high-risk breast cancer patients. The overall CK+ rate was 34% (44/128 patients), 29% (15/51) for patients with T1 tumors, 33% (28/84) for N0 patients and 31% (26/82) for patients with G1-2 breast carcinoma. Interestingly, 67% of CK+ patients were only positive in one of the two BM aspirates studied. At least one tumor marker including carcinoembryonic antigen, carbohydrate antigen 15-3 and tissue polypeptide antigen, was increased in 58/128 (45%) patients [21/58 (36%) were CK+ in the BM]. Surprisingly, levels for the extracellular domain of Her-2/neu in serum samples were within the normal range in every patient studied. After a 2-year follow-up, 7/128 patients relapsed (3/7 CK+/TM-; 2/7 CK-/TM+; 2/7 CK-/TM-). We concluded that studying two BM aspirates for CK+ cells by immunocytochemistry in combination with tumor marker determination is useful for identifying patients with a higher risk for relapse. A tumor cell enrichment technique, applied in 70 patients prior to immunocytochemistry using dynabeads directly coupled to an antibody (BerEp4) targeting the 17-1A antigen, did not enhance the detection rate of disseminated tumor cells in this patient group. We monitored CK+/17-1A+ cells in the BM and PBSC and studied Her-2/neu serum levels of patients with locally advanced (n=13, group 1) and metastatic breast cancer (n=30, group 2). CK+ cells were found in the BM of 3/13 (23%) group 1 patients before but not after chemotherapy resulting in an overall survival (OS) of 92% after a median follow-up of 33 months. Contamination of PBSC in 2/9 (22%) patients was not associated with decreased survival. In group 2 patients, the CK+ rate was 60% (18/30 patients) before and 40% (4/10 patients) after therapy with an OS rate of 43% after 29 months. PBSC samples were positive in 7/24 (29%) patients. CK+ BM and PBSC led to a rapid progress and short OS whereas tumor cell free BM and PBSC resulted in a mean OS of 30 months. The antigen 17-1A was detected on most CK+ cells in both patient groups before therapy, on all CK+ PBSC and on CK+ cells in group 2 patients after therapy. Increased Her-2/neu levels were found in group 2 patients before chemotherapy. In conclusion, micrometastatic cells are present in blood and PBSC grafts of high-risk breast cancer patients and can survive even HD-chemotherapy. Immunotherapeutic target antigens on the cell surface of these cells support the idea that a combined chemoimmunotherapy might be successful in eliminating minimal residual disease.
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PMID:A summary of two clinical studies on tumor cell dissemination in primary and metastatic breast cancer: methods, prognostic significance and implication for alternative treatment protocols (Review). 1195

BACKGROUND: Detection of micrometastasis is an important problem of clinical significance for a better understanding and control of tumor progression, which will improve patients' survival time.METHODS: To identify micrometastases in bone marrow, an immunocytochemical assay for epithelial cytokeratin protein was performed in 106 patients with primary gastric cancer. Also, in 40 of the 106 patients, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression and intratumoral vessel density were examined by an immunohistochemical staining method.RESULTS: Of the 106 patients, 22 (20.8%) presented with cytokeratin-positive cells in bone marrow at the time of primary surgery. The positive findings were related to depth of invasion, peritoneal dissemination, and liver metastasis. Patients with cytokeratin-positivity in bone marrow had a higher VEGF positive rate (73%; 8/11) than did cytokeratin-negative patients (48%; 14/29). Intratumoral vessel density in VEGF-positive patients was 26.9 +/- 10.3, which was significantly higher than that in VEGF-negative patients (13.2 +/- 8.7, P < 0.05). Thus, the presence of cytokeratin-positive cells in bone marrow was closely related to angiogenesis in the primary tumor.CONCLUSIONS: Cytokeratin staining can be useful for identifying patients at high risk for metastasis. Prophylactic lymph node dissection, adjuvant chemotherapy, and antiangiogenic treatment may be necessary for patients with micrometastasis.
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PMID:Clinical significance of micrometastasis in bone marrow of patients with gastric cancer and its relation to angiogenesis. 1195 70

BACKGROUND: Despite curative resection of the primary tumor with extensive dissection of lymph nodes, some patients with node-negative gastric cancer die of local relapse or metastatic disease. Microinvolvement of regional lymph nodes may play an important role in the prognosis.METHODS: To evaluate the incidence and prognostic implications of regional lymph node microinvolvement in node-negative gastric cancer, we retrospectively analyzed tissue samples from 51 patients operated on for primary gastric cancer. They had tumors that invaded beyond the muscularis propria, but without metastasis to the lymph nodes, shown by the conventional H&E staining method. The regional lymph nodes were examined immunohistochemically, using monoclonal antibodies against cytokeratin.RESULTS: Microinvolvement was found in 4.8% of lymph nodes (67/1390) and in 43.2% of the patients (22/51). The clinical outcome of the patients with microinvolvement was not significantly different from those without it. However, no patient died in the no-microinvolvement group, while three patients in the microinvolvement group died of recurrence.CONCLUSION: The incidence of microinvolvement in conventionally negative lymph nodes cannot be ignored, and detecting microinvolvement may be important for predicting recurrence of gastric cancer.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical detection of lymph node microinvolvement in node-negative gastric cancer. 1195 92

Collision tumors of the stomach are uncommon. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report of gastric collision tumor composed of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) intermixed with primary adenocarcinoma in the English literature. The adenocarcinoma was determined to be the primary tumor based on histologic features. The tumor cells of the GIST were diffusely and strongly positive for CD34 and CD117, weakly positive for smooth muscle actin (5% of cells), and negative for desmin, S-100 protein, synaptophysin, and cytokeratin. There was no transition between the different components. We hypothesized that the stomach was influenced by the same unknown carcinogen, resulting in a simultaneous proliferation of different cell lines (epithelial and stromal cell). This case represents an example of two independent tumors in a unique one-on-another pattern, namely growth of adenocarcinoma on GIST.
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PMID:Collision tumor of the stomach: a case report of mixed gastrointestinal stromal tumor and adenocarcinoma. 1235 97

Melanoma is a devastating disease frequently encountered within both veterinary and human medicine. Molecular changes linked with neoplastic transformation of melanocytes include mutations in genes that encode proteins intrinsic to the regulatory pathways of two tumor suppressor proteins (retinoblastoma protein and p53), proto-oncogene mutation to oncogenes, altered expression of epithelial cadherin and CD44 adhesion molecules, and upregulation of angiogenic factors and other growth factors. Histologic evaluation of the primary mass is the most common means of diagnosis, with cytology used more frequently to document metastasis. Melanoma's highly variable histologic and cytologic patterns can make diagnosis by either method problematic. Adherent epithelioid morphology, including signet ring forms, and nonadherent round and spindle forms are recognized, with pigmentation an inconsistent finding. The site of the tumor, the thickness of the primary tumor or depth of invasion, and the number of mitotic figures per high-power field or per millimeter are used histologically to predict biologic behavior, whereas site and degree of pleomorphism are typically used for cytologic preparations. Diagnosis of amelanotic melanoma can be aided by ancillary diagnostic techniques. Tumor cells are usually positive for vimentin, S100, neuron-specific enolase, and Melan-A, and negative for cytokeratin. Melan-A as a positive marker is not as sensitive as the others are but is likely more specific. Monoclonal antibodies to human melanosome-specific antigens 1 and 5 cross-react with canine antigens for a combined sensitivity rate of 83%. Mouse monoclonal antibody IBF9 specifically recognizes canine melanoma antigen and also has good sensitivity. Serologic markers, including cytokines, cell adhesion molecules, and melanoma-inhibitory activity, are being investigated as potential sentinels of melanoma. Currently, there is no single diagnostic technique capable of differentiating benign from malignant melanocytic neoplasms or predicting survival time.
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PMID:A comparative review of melanocytic neoplasms. 1245 Jan 97

Cure for ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas is restricted to resectable tumors, but survival after surgery is still poor. Despite apparently curative resection, these cancers rapidly recur. Thus, the present pathologic examination should be enriched by sensitive methods to detect minimal residual disease. In a prospective setting we studied the frequency of minimal residual disease after curative resection by routine histopathology, immunohistology, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for mutated K-ras. Furthermore, the prognostic implication of detecting of MRD was determined. Prospectively, tumor tissue and corresponding paraaortic lymph nodes were obtained from 78 patients, who underwent surgery for pancreatic head tumors between 1999 and 2001. Sixty-nine of 78 cases were diagnosed for ductal adenocarcinoma (study group), whereas nine cases were diagnosed for benign pancreatic tumors (control group). Paraaortic lymph nodes were examined in step sections by routine histopathology (hematoxylin and eosin) and immunohistology using a pan-cytokeratin antibody. DNA of the primary tumor and corresponding paraaortic lymph nodes were analyzed by PCR-based assays with respect to mutated K-ras in codon 12. The recurrence-free survival and overall survival were correlated with the results of the latter methods. In 3 of 69 patients tumor cells were detected in paraaortic lymph nodes by routine histopathology and in 5 of 69 patients by immunohistology. K-ras mutations were detected in 42 of 69 ductal adenocarcinomas (61%), whereas 12 (17%) were positive in paraaortic lymph nodes. All of the latter patients had recurrence after surgery and a significant poorer survival than those without mutated K-ras. Furthermore, paraaortic lymph nodes diagnosed for K-ras mutation were independent prognostic markers in multivariate analysis. In the control group K-ras mutations were detected in one adenoma of Vater's papilla but not in paraaortic lymph nodes. Tumor cell DNA can be detected more sensitively by the described PCR method than with hematoxylin and eosin or immunohistologic staining, leading to a higher sensitivity for detection of micrometastases. The described PCR method clearly determines subgroups of patients after curative resection with early recurrence and poor survival and could therefore enrich the pathologic examination.
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PMID:Prognostic implications of routine, immunohistochemical, and molecular staging in resectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma. 1245 24


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