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Query: UMLS:C0677930 (
primary tumor
)
20,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes are mostly associated with small cell lung cancer. Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome appears to be caused by anti-presynaptic calcium channel antibodies. Calcium channels are also present in the cell membrane of small cell lung cancer, which may trigger the formation of anti-calcium channel antibodies. It is the most convincing argument in support of the auto-immune paraneoplastic theory, which refers to cross-antigenicity. Serum of patients with small cell carcinoma and
cancer-associated
retinopathy contains immunoglobulins against several antigens in the retinal and tumor cells. Patients with chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction (gastrointestinal neuropathy) associated with small cell lung cancer displayed circulating IgG antibodies reactive with neurons of myenteric plexus (anti-enteric neuronal antibodies). On the other hand, high levels of anti-neuronal antibodies (anti-Hu) have been found in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid of patients suffering from subacute encephalomyelitis (limbic encephalitis, cerebellar degeneration, sensory neuronopathy) associated with small cell lung cancer. The pathogenic role of the anti-neuronal antibody is not well established. Nevertheless, the finding of high titer antineuronal antibody in patients with a suggestive clinical syndrome is of great interest since it confirms the paraneoplastic syndrome and suggests the location of the
primary tumor
when the cancer is unknown.
...
PMID:[Autoimmunity and cancer: paraneoplastic neurological syndromes associated with small cell cancer]. 133 87
An antigen, protein X (Px), was purified from immune complexes isolated from malignant pleural effusions from patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung by EDTA treatment, PEG 8000 precipitation, protein A affinity chromatography, and Sephadex G-200 separation in the presence of 3 M NaCl. The purified antigen had a M(r) 17,000 by SDS-PAGE, and consisted of isoelectric species of pI 6.3 and 6.6. Purified Px recombined with Ig isolated from pleural fluids from patients with lung adenocarcinoma, but not with Ig from patients with breast carcinoma. Using an autologous human and heterologous chicken antibody, Px was found, by immunohistology, in the cytoplasm of some of the well-differentiated lung adenocarcinoma cells, but was not seen in normal lung or a variety of other malignant tissues. A liquid-phase competitive-inhibition RIA was developed. Over 30 ng/ml of Px were found in 9 of 15 pleural fluids from patients with lung carcinoma, none of 20 from patients with breast, ovary, stomach or colon cancer, and in 3 of 15 patients with unknown
primary tumor
. Our data suggest that Px may be a lung-
cancer-associated
autoantigen which can elicit a host humoral response in vivo.
...
PMID:Characterization of a lung-cancer-associated auto-antigen. 139 30
The very rapidly expanding knowledge and technologies of molecular biology are reviewed with special reference to problems in the clinical management of lung cancer. Genetic events, tumor-associated antigens, production of murine and human monoclonal antibodies, culture of cell lines, intratumoral phenotypic diversity and squamous-lung-
cancer-associated
antigens are discussed and related to possible therapeutical approaches. A monoclonal antibody with high specificity for squamous cell lung cancer reacted positively in blood samples and tissue extracts in about 80%. Its use as a marker during follow-up after surgical treatment is demonstrated by examples. It is concluded that there will be limiting factors in the therapeutic use of monoclonal antibodies, such as intratumoral phenotypic diversity. Genetic analysis might be a method for selecting a high risk group of individuals in whom exposure to carcinogenic factors, such as cigarette smoking, would be fatal. Murine monoclonal antibodies can be used in vitro for screening, for histological examination and for prognostic studies. Human monoclonal antibodies should be used for in vivo purposes as well as for the screening of
primary tumor
and metastases for the therapy. To achieve usable results, the monoclonal antibodies should be raised against the cell membranes that, in particular, are expressed on the stem cells of the neoplastic cell population.
...
PMID:On the advent and necessity of molecular biology in the clinical management of lung cancer. 243 92
The antitumor activity of a glycopeptide purified from human malignant effusion, termed
cancer-associated
galactosyltransferase acceptor (CAGA), was assessed in BALB/c mice bearing primary and metastatic tumors. Initial studies with the fast-growing KA31 and slow-growing KB521 Kirsten sarcoma-transformed mouse fibroblast cell lines confirmed their tumorigenicity and metastatic potential. Inoculation of 1 X 10(5) KA31 cells s.c. resulted in palpable tumor formation in recipient animals within 14 days and death within 42 days from
primary tumor
growth (mean survival, 26 days; total survival, 0%). Inoculation of the slower-growing KB521 resulted in tumor formation in 85% of recipients, and tumor-bearing animals succumbed within 56 days after primary inoculation (mean survival, 48 days; total survival, 15%). Administration of CAGA by i.p. injection as a single dose or series of five daily doses (each 50 micrograms) inhibited
primary tumor
growth by 35 to 68% in animals receiving KA31 cells and by 25 to 70% in animals receiving KB521 cells. CAGA increased mean survival 50% from 26 to 38 days and total survival from 0 to 27% in animals bearing KA31-derived primary tumors. In animals bearing KB521-derived tumors, CAGA increased mean survival from 48 to 90 days and total survival from 15 to 50%. Similarly, CAGA was also found to significantly inhibit formation of pulmonary metastases in animals after excision of primary tumors. CAGA administration reduced death from metastatic deposits by 55 to 66% in animals initially inoculated with the KA31 cell line and by 58 to 90% in animals initially bearing primary tumors derived from the KB521 line. There was a corresponding decrease in the number of metastatic deposits per lung after administration of CAGA. Thus, CAGA appears to have potential antitumor activity against tumors with a range of growth rates and appears to inhibit both primary and metastatic tumor growth.
...
PMID:Inhibition of primary and metastatic tumor growth in mice by cancer-associated galactosyltransferase acceptor. 640 94
Altered expression of ABH blood group substances is a common feature of human colorectal carcinoma, yet it remains unclear how these structural changes influence the biological properties of tumor cells. Azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumors display many features of the human disease, thereby providing a potentially useful model to study the role of blood group substances in colon cancer progression. We have prepared monoclonal antibodies to a microsomal fraction isolated from an azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumor and selected an antibody that detects
cancer-associated
changes. Monoclonal antibody (mAb) 3A7 recognizes a determinant on type 2 chain blood group A (GalNAc alpha 1-3[Fuc alpha 1-2]Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R) and B (Gal alpha 1-3[Fuc alpha 1-2]Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc-R) oligosaccharides. Expression of the epitope detected by this antibody was developmentally regulated in rat colon, with maximal expression from day 4-21 after birth. Immunohistochemical staining and Western blotting analyses of azoxymethane-induced colon tumors revealed increased expression of the epitope in all of the 21 colonic tumors examined, including preneoplastic glands within transitional mucosa. Conventional and signet-ring adenocarcinomas that had invaded through the muscularis propria (Duke's B2) consistently showed the most intense staining with mAb 3A7, including regions depicting angioinvasion. Some of the lymph node metastases (Duke's C2) stained poorly with the antibody. The epitope was also expressed in blood group A positive human colon carcinoma cell lines, including HT29 and SW480 but not by SW620, a cell line derived from a lymph node metastasis isolated in vivo from the SW480
primary tumor
, or in the blood group B cell line SW1417. The glycoproteins detected by mAb 3A7 in rat colon tumors and HT29 cells ranged in size between 50 and 200 kd, including a major species of 140 kd. Affinity chromatography of detergent lysates of normal rat colon on the blood group A specific lectin Dolichos biflorus (DBA)-agarose resulted in nearly quantitative binding of glycoprotein species detected by the antibody. By contrast, immunoreactive glycoproteins from rat colon tumors or HT29 cells bound poorly to DBA-agarose but were retained by another blood group A-binding lectin, Helix-pomatia (HPA)-agarose. These results indicate that colon carcinogenesis results in quantitative as well as qualitative changes in oligosaccharides detected by mAb 3A7 and suggest that the combined use of mAb 3A7 and blood group A-specific lectins may provide a useful tool for early detection of colon cancer.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibody recognizing a determinant on type 2 chain blood group A and B oligosaccharides detects oncodevelopmental changes in azoxymethane-induced rat colon tumors and human colon cancer cell lines. 753 50
Primary tumors of the pineal body can produce dyscoordinative movements of the eye, pupillary dilatation, paralysis of adduction during convergence and nystagmus. Obstruction of the aqueduct can cause hydrocephalus, increased intracranial pressure and papilledema. Diabetes insipidus may be a presenting symptom. Pinealocytes and the photoreceptors of the eye contain several autoantigens. In man, the best known is the S-antigen. This antigen can be detected in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with primary tumors of the pineal body. The S-antigen, and possibly other related autoantigens, can elicit an autoimmune mediated reaction causing inflammatory eye symptoms. This recently described paraneoplastic neurologic syndrome shares properties in common with other known
cancer-associated
ophthalmologic syndromes characterised by rapid development of eye symptoms, rapid loss of sight and by eye manifestations prior to evident appearance of symptoms related to
primary tumor
growth. A
primary tumor
of the pineal body should be considered in patients where a monosymptomatic uveoretinitis presents without associated provoking factors. Furthermore, analyses of S-antigen in the spinal fluid can be useful in the clinical diagnosis of the same primary tumors.
...
PMID:[Physiopathologic mechanisms behind eye symptoms in primary tumors of the pineal body]. 843 Apr 65
Penile metastases from prostate cancer are rare and are usually a manifestation of wide-spread cancer dissemination. Isolated urethral metastases form a small fraction of these cases, have a longer survival rate and may represent spread by implantation following instrumentation. We report a case of prostatic carcinoma presenting with an isolated metastasis to the penile urethra after catheterisation and transurethral prostatectomy. The
primary tumor
had a prominent intraductal component whose architectural features were mimicked in the metastasis. The possible mechanisms of spread and the diverse appearances of
cancer associated
with an intraductal component are discussed.
...
PMID:Intraductal carcinoma of the prostate metastatic to the penile urethra: a rare demonstration of two morphologic patterns of tumor growth. 964 10
The majority of tumors from patients affected by hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) exhibit a mutator phenotype characterized by widespread microsatellite instability (MSI) and somatic mutations in repeated sequences in several
cancer-associated
genes. An inverse relationship between MSI and chromosomal instability (CIN) has been demonstrated and HNPCC-associated tumors are generally characterized by diploid or near-diploid cells with few or no chromosomal rearrangements. We have studied MSI, somatic mutations in repeat-containing genes, DNA-ploidy, and cytogenetic aberrations in a colon carcinoma from a patient with a germline MLH1 mutation. Mutations in coding repeats were assessed in 10 macroscopically separate areas of the
primary tumor
and in two lymph nodes. Some of the genes studied (E2F4, MSH3, MSH6, TCF4, and TGFBRII) showed a consistent lack of mutations, whereas others (BAX, Caspase-5 and IGFIIR) displayed alterations in some tumor regions but not in others. The tumor had DNA-index 1.1-1.2 and a stable, aberrant karyotype with extra copies of chromosomes 7 and 12 and the structural aberrations i(1q), der(20)t(8;20), and der(22)t(1;22). The finding of CIN, MSI, and somatic mutations in coding repeats in this tumor suggests that these phenomena may act together in HNPCC tumorigenesis. Furthermore, the observed intratumoral heterogeneity of mutations in coding repeats implies these changes occur late in tumorigenesis and, thus, probably play a role in tumor progression rather than initiation.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic aberrations and heterogeneity of mutations in repeat-containing genes in a colon carcinoma from a patient with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. 1199 96
Dysadherin is a
cancer-associated
cell membrane glycoprotein. Its cDNA encodes 178 amino acids, including a putative signal sequence, a potential O-glycosylated extracellular domain, a single transmembrane domain, and a short cytoplasmic tail. Dysadherin is believed to down-regulate the expression of E-cadherin, the prime mediator of cell-cell adhesion in epithelial cells, by a posttranscriptional mechanism and promote the metastasis of carcinoma cells. To evaluate the association between dysadherin expression and E-cadherin expression in thyroid carcinoma, immunostaining for dysadherin and E-cadherin was performed in 51 papillary, 10 follicular, and 31 undifferentiated carcinomas. Immunoreactivity for dysadherin, localized at cell-cell boundaries, was detected in 39 of the 51 papillary carcinomas and all 31 undifferentiated carcinomas but not in the follicular carcinomas or normal thyroid tissue controls. Dysadherin expression was significantly higher in undifferentiated carcinoma than in papillary carcinoma and follicular carcinoma and showed significant negative correlation with E-cadherin expression. The degree of dysadherin expression was significantly associated with the prognosis, occurrence of secondary undifferentiated carcinomas, size of the
primary tumor
, and metastasis to the regional lymph nodes and lungs. In conclusion, a process involving increased dysadherin expression may lead to an adverse clinical outcome.
...
PMID:Dysadherin: expression and clinical significance in thyroid carcinoma. 1297 Mar 17
Several types of aggressive cancers, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), often arise as a multifocal
primary tumor
. This suggests a high rate of premalignant changes in noncancerous tissue before the formation of a solitary tumor. Examination of the messenger RNA expression profiles of tissue samples derived from patients with cirrhosis of various etiologies by complementary DNA (cDNA) microarray indicated that they can be grossly separated into two main groups. One group included hepatitis B and C virus infections, hemochromatosis, and Wilson's disease. The other group contained mainly alcoholic liver disease, autoimmune hepatitis, and primary biliary cirrhosis. Analysis of these two groups by the cross-validated leave-one-out machine-learning algorithms revealed a molecular signature containing 556 discriminative genes (P <.001). It is noteworthy that 273 genes in this signature (49%) were also significantly altered in HCC (P <.001). Many genes were previously known to be related to HCC. The 273-gene signature was validated as
cancer-associated
genes by matching this set to additional independent tumor tissue samples from 163 patients with HCC, 56 patients with lung carcinoma, and 38 patients with breast carcinoma. From this signature, 30 genes were altered most significantly in tissue samples from high-risk individuals with cirrhosis and from patients with HCC. Among them, 12 genes encoded secretory proteins found in sera. In conclusion, we identified a unique gene signature in the tissue samples of patients with cirrhosis, which may be used as candidate markers for diagnosing the early onset of HCC in high-risk populations and may guide new strategies for chemoprevention. Supplementary material for this article can be found on the HEPATOLOGY website (http://interscience.wiley.com/jpages/0270-9139/suppmat/index.html).
...
PMID:Cancer-associated molecular signature in the tissue samples of patients with cirrhosis. 1476 6
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