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

A patient with metastatic islet cell carcinoma demonstrated multiple clinical syndromes simultaneously with secretion of ACTH, gastrin, glucagon, and serotonin. Hepatic arterial embolization resulted in an initial decrease in all secretory products, which was sustained for glucagon and serotonin. Recrudescence of the Cushings and Zollinger-Ellison syndrome was managed by surgical extirpation of the primary tumor and regional metastases as well as bilateral adrenalectomy. Electron microscopy and immunocytochemistry of the primary tumor and the metastatic lesions revealed the presence of multiple types of granules within single cells and, different patterns of secretory profiles in different tumor sites.
...
PMID:Metastatic islet cell tumor with ACTH, gastrin, and glucagon secretion. Clinical and pathologic studies with multiple therapies. 303 1

The intestinal carcinoid tumors of 26 patients were stained for the presence of serotonin, gastrin, somatostatin, motilin, secretin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, ACTH, and neurotensin. Argentaffin and argyrophil stains were also performed in all cases. Thirty-five separate tumors (counting metastases and multiple primaries) from the 26 patients were studied. Serotonin was present in 30 of the 35 tumors. Nineteen tumors contained serotonin only. Fourteen tumors contained multiple neuroendocrine products. One tumor contained gastrin only. One tumor did not stain immunohistochemically, but was argyrophilic. Metastatic deposits were studied in nine patients. Some metastases produced the identical neuroendocrine products as the primary tumor, whereas others produced either additional or fewer hormones than the primary tumor. Moreover, different metastases from the same primary tumor were observed to produce different hormones. Argyrophilic cells were present in all cases and were much more numerous than cells staining by immunohistochemistry. Argyrophilic cells probably contain monoamines and polypeptide hormones in addition to those studied in this series. The argyrophil stain was the best general stain in this study for the demonstration of neuroendocrine cells. Argentaffin staining was negative in ten cases that were serotonin positive and two argentaffin positive cases were serotonin negative. The carcinoid syndrome, as clinically defined by the presence of flushing and diarrhea, was noted in five patients, all of whom had serotonin-containing small bowel carcinoids. Endocrine-related symptoms were not clinically appreciated in the remaining patients.
...
PMID:The neuroendocrine products of intestinal carcinoids. An immunoperoxidase study of 35 carcinoid tumors stained for serotonin and eight polypeptide hormones. 618 28

Two cases of gastrin releasing peptide (GRP)-producing medullary thyroid carcinoma are presented. Immunohistochemical examination revealed the presence of GRP-like immunoreactivity (IR-GRP) in the primary tumor tissues. High concentration of IR-GRP was also demonstrated in extracts of the primary tumors by radioimmunologic means with use of a GRP-specific antiserum. Chromatographic analysis showed that the immunoreactivity was composed of at least two molecular forms: one behaved as synthetic porcine GRP on Sephadex G-50 gel filtration and the other as porcine GRP (14-27), a C-terminal active fragment of GRP. The IR-GRP was shown not to be attributed to bombesin-like immunoreactivity. Substance P-like immunoreactivity was not detected in the tumor tissues by either immunohistochemical or radioimmunologic means. This is, as far as the authors are aware, the first finding of IR-GRP as an ectopic product in medullary carcinoma.
...
PMID:Gastrin-releasing peptide immunoreactivity in medullary thyroid carcinoma. 637 Apr 16

The clinical evolution of type I multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN I) was studied in 45 patients among a consecutive series of 172 with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (ZES). These 172 patients were seen in our hospital between 1959 and 1989. Diarrhea was half as frequent in ZES-MEN I as in sporadic ZES cases. At diagnosis, mean basal acid output and serum gastrin levels in MEN I patients (28.8 +/- 6.6 mmol/h and 587 +/- 487 pg/ml, respectively) were not different from those observed in the others with sporadic ZES. Laparotomy was performed in all 36 patients with no diffuse liver involvement to attempt the removal of gastrinomas. Twenty-nine patients had adenomas, located in the pancreas in 21, in the duodenal wall in 3, and in both in 5. Adenomas were multiple in 23 cases (78%). No tumor was found in seven patients. Twenty-nine of the 36 operated patients were tumor-free after surgery; 7 died in the postoperative period between 1959 and 1970. Median follow-up of the 38 other patients was 95 months (range 17-278 months). Among the 24 patients without residual tumor at discharge (group I), biological and/or morphological evidence of a persistent or recurrent source of gastrin was obtained in 22. Among the 14 patients with residual tumor (group II), an increase in tumor size was seen in 5 after a median of 27 months (range 9-36 months), while no change occurred in 9 after 54 months (3-100 months). Actuarial survival curves were not different, either in group I versus group II patients (67 and 72% at 5-year follow-up, respectively) or in MEN I versus sporadic ZES patients. Apparently, complete resection of primary tumor did not reduce the incidence of subsequent liver metastases. In all, 21 of the 45 patients had malignant gastrinomas (47%), consisting of liver metastases in 14 (31%), metastatic lymph nodes in 11 (24%), and lung metastases in 2 (4%). Monitoring of fundic argyrophil cells disclosed hyperplasia in 13 of the 14 MEN I patients (92%), and 5 had invasive carcinoid tumors. Taken together, these results prompt us to recommend that in ZES-MEN I patients, surgery should be avoided and oxyntic mucosa regularly monitored.
...
PMID:Clinical, anatomical, and evolutive features of patients with the Zollinger-Ellison syndrome combined with type I multiple endocrine neoplasia. 809 74

A composite carcinoma of the gastric body consisting of endocrine and mucous epithelial cells with interspersed amphicrine cells is reported together with ultrastructural and immunocytochemical documentation of endocrine and nonendocrine differentiation. The tumor was associated with hypergastrinemia related to chronic atrophic gastritis (achlorhydria) and with multiple proliferative lesions, such as intramucosal microcarcinoid (IMC) and endocrine cell proliferations of the micronodular and linear type, which are currently regarded as carcinoid precursor changes. Ultrastructurally, a composite architecture with amphicrine features was demonstrated in the primary tumor, IMC, and liver metastases. On the other hand, the endocrine cell proliferations exclusively contained gastrin and enterochromaffinlike cells. Immunostaining with antibodies to calcitonin documented a number of positive cells both in the primary and in the metastatic sites. This is the first report of mixed exocrine-endocrine-amphicrine components both in a metastasizing carcinoma and in its precursor lesions in a chronic hypergastrinemic state. Unlike previously reported lesions, the endocrine component was unexpectedly composed of calcitonin cells, which are not usually present in the gastric mucosa.
...
PMID:Composite gastric carcinoma and precursor lesions with amphicrine features in chronic atrophic gastritis. 838 Dec 47

Four cases of primary hepatic carcinoid were identified during a retrospective study of liver resections for primary tumor. The cases included two adult males, one adult female, and a 9-year-old boy in whom gastrin levels were documented. The estimation of gastrin levels was prompted by symptoms suggestive of acid-peptic disease. One patient died postoperatively. The other three are alive and well at 3 years, 2 years, and at 1 year, respectively, after surgery, outcomes distinctly different from hepatocellular carcinomas. Diagnostic difficulties may be experienced in histologic assessment, and this may require recourse to immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. Long-term follow-up and careful exclusion of a possible primary elsewhere are necessary for establishing the primary nature of liver carcinoids.
...
PMID:Primary carcinoid tumor of the liver: report of four resected cases including one with gastrin production. 866 31

Although ectopic expression of the cholecystokinin B/gastrin receptor (CCK-BR) is widely reported in human colorectal cancers, its role in mediating the proliferative effects of gastrin1-17 (G-17) on these cancers is unknown. Here we report the isolation of a novel splice variant of CCK-BR that exhibits constitutive (ligand-independent) activation of pathways regulating intracellular free Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) and cell growth. The splice variant (designated CCK-BRi4sv for intron 4-containing splice variant) is expressed in colorectal cancers but not in normal colonic mucosa adjacent to the cancer. Balb3T3 cells expressing CCK-BRi4sv exhibited spontaneous, ligand-independent, oscillatory increases in [Ca(2+)](i), whereas cells expressing wild-type CCK-BR did not. Primary cultures of cells isolated from resected colorectal cancers also exhibited a similar pattern of spontaneous [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations. For both Balb3T3 and primary tumor cells, application of G-17 (10 and 200 nm, respectively) caused an increase in [Ca(2+)](i). Selective CCK-BR antagonists blocked the G-17-stimulated Ca(2+) responses but not the spontaneous [Ca(2+)](i) oscillations. Cells expressing CCK-BRi4sv exhibited an increased growth rate ( approximately 2.5-fold), in the absence of G-17, compared with cells expressing wild-type CCK-BR. The selective pattern of expression, constitutive activity, and trophic action associated with CCK-BRi4sv suggest that this variant may regulate colorectal cancer cell proliferation though a gastrin-independent mechanism.
...
PMID:Human colorectal cancers express a constitutively active cholecystokinin-B/gastrin receptor that stimulates cell growth. 1091 57

Gastrinomas are uncommon tumors which are difficult to locate. They are often located in the head of the pancreas. About two-thirds of them are malignant, their growth is slow and they usually metastasize in the liver. In about 25% of cases, the Zollinger-Ellison (Z-E) syndrome is included in the multiple endocrine neoplasm type 1 syndrome (MEN 1).A 14-year old male patient presenting an episode of abdominal perforation which required emergency surgery is reported. The abdominal ultrasonography, CT scan and magnetic resonance revealed a single lesion in the left liver lobe, suggesting metastasis. Significantly increased levels of serum gastrin suggested a diagnosis of Z-E syndrome. A study with 111In-octreotide was required to locate the primary tumor and evaluate its extent. The scintigraphy showed only one abnormal uptake focus in the left liver lobe. Post-surgery scintigraphy studies revealed the presence of metastatic adenopathies which were removed after a second surgery. No pathologic findings were observed in the last nuclear medicine study. The somatostatin receptor scintigraphy is the most sensitive method to locate primary gastrinomas and to assess the tumoral dissemination in patients with Z-E Syndrome.
...
PMID:[Scintigraphy with 111In-octreotide in a case of primary hepatic gastrinoma]. 1147 73

Research has widely supported the efficacy of screening for colorectal cancer in reducing mortality. A blood-based assay potentially represents a more accessible early detection tool for the identification of solid tumor cells originating from a primary tumor site in the body. We demonstrate a relatively easy and highly reproducible technique for the detection of mRNA expression of genes as markers of malignancy in blood samples of patients with colon cancer. The present study aims to identify a set of specific mRNAs expressed in epithelial cells but not in blood cells, which may be useful as markers for early detection of circulating colon cancer cells by a simple, qualitative RT-PCR assay following semi-automated RNA extraction from peripheral blood samples. Our approach includes a systematic search for candidate markers using digital differential display, search on UniGene colon EST libraries and analysis of published data on colon cancer gene expression. A final list included the following genes: bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4), cyclin D (CycD), family with sequence similarity 3, member D (FAM3D), gastrin (GAS), glycoprotein A33 transmembrane (GPA33), glutathione peroxidase 2 gastrointestinal (GPX2), galactoside-binding, soluble, 4 (galectin 4) (LGALS4), non-SMC, structural maintenance of chromosomes, element 1 protein (NSE1), tumor-associated calcium signal transducer 1 (TACSTD1), telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT), trefoil factor 3 intestinal (TFF3), transmembrane 4 superfamily member 3 (TM4SF3), UDP glycosyltransferase 1 family, polypeptide A9 (UGT1A9), villin 1 (VIL1), and the novel gene FLJ20127. The mRNA expression of these genes was evaluated in a pool of 16 samples from subjects diagnosed with colon cancer and from 16 normal-controls. We observed expression in 13 of the 15 investigated genes from the blood samples of the vast majority of patients considered, but also in a certain percentage of the controls (from 14.3 to 100%). This finding confirms that the extreme sensitivity of RT-PCR is able to detect minimal amounts of mRNA expressed in a non tissue-specific manner ('illegitimate transcription'). On the contrary, NSE1 and GAS mRNAs were not detected either in patient or in control blood samples; however, they were abundantly expressed in normal and cancerous colon mucosa, encouraging further search for useful markers able to detect epithelial cells in peripheral blood.
...
PMID:Search for epithelial-specific mRNAs in peripheral blood of patients with colon cancer by RT-PCR. 1537 55

Composite tumors of the stomach consisting of mixed glandular and endocrine components are rare. We report 3 cases of composite glandular and endocrine tumors with pancreatic acinar differentiation in the stomach with their clinicopathologic findings. The patients' presenting symptoms were variable and included abdominal pain, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, and weight loss. One patient with abdominal pain also had an elevated serum lipase level, clinically mimicking acute pancreatitis. The histology of these tumors was similar. They showed admixture of well-differentiated endocrine components with acinar and glandular components. The glandular component consisted of columnar epithelial cells resembling gastric foveolar or intestinal goblet cells, consistent with a well-differentiated adenocarcinoma. A panel of histochemical and immunohistochemical stains was performed, which included PAS, Alcian blue, Mib1, CEA, cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 20, Muc2, Muc5AC, chromogranin, synaptophysin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, insulin, gastrin, serotonin, and pancreatic polypeptide. While the immunoreactivity for cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 20, Muc2, Muc5AC, and CEA was largely restricted to the glandular component, the endocrine and pancreatic acinar markers showed marked variability and overlap. All cases showed immunoreactivity for at least one of the exocrine pancreatic enzymes, and all expressed endocrine differentiation. Some degree of amphicrine differentiation was suggested in all cases. Two cases showed metastases in perigastric lymph nodes, which histologically resembled the primary tumor. In summary, these tumors represent another distinct type of composite glandular and endocrine gastric neoplasm with pancreatic acinar differentiation.
...
PMID:Composite glandular and endocrine tumors of the stomach with pancreatic acinar differentiation. 1622 21


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>