Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies to three cervical carcinoma cell lines (Me-180, SW-732 and HeLa) and to Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2)-infected cells were determined in a long-term study of women with cervical carcinoma. Cytolysis of surface antigens differed significantly between the cervical carcinoma cell lines and HSV-2. Regression of the tumor during treatment was accompanied by decreasing cytolysis in the cervical carcinoma lines, while tumor bearers and patients who became severely ill had high or increasing cytotoxic antibodies, The opposite was noted for the antibody response to HSV-2 infected cells: patients with less advanced cancer had significantly higher cytolytic activity than those who were severely ill or had advanced cancer; long-term survivors demonstrated high, stable lysis of HSV-2 infected cells. As a control of the cervical carcinoma cell lines, cytolytic activity was tested also on a lung carcinoma cell line, A-549. No significant differences were found between the patients with cervical cancer and the control women. Tumor bearers and patients treated for advanced cervical cancer showed a slight but non-significant increase in cytolytic activity on the A-549 line.
Int J Cancer 1977 Nov 15
PMID:Complement-dependent cytotoxic antibodies in the course of cervical carcinoma. 20 May 70

A myeloproliferative disorder, similar to agonogenic myeloid metaplasia, has been described in patients with cancer. Two patients with carcinoma of the lung are described who presented with such a disorder but in whom there was no evidence of bone marrow fibrosis and in one of whom there was no evidence of bone marrow infiltration by tumor. The possible mechanism of this association is discussed.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the lung presenting with a myeloproliferative disorder. A report of two patients. 20 31

The present epidemic of carcinoma of the lung is a consequence of society's indulence of cigarette smoking. Most of the progress in treatment has resulted from more accurate staging of the cancer at the time of diagnosis and the selection of the safest therapy. Future progress hinges on the public health measures to stop smoking, and to a much lesser degree on earlier diagnosis and advances in radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the lung: the view today. 20 21

Peritoneoscopy with liver biopsy was routinely done as a pretreatment staging procedure in 190 patients with small-cell anaplastic carcinoma of the lung. Subtyping of the patients according to the WHO classification included 28.3% with fusiform cell type (WHO II,1), 28.9% with polygonal cell type (WHO II,2), 41.5% with lymphocytelike cell type (WHO II,3) and 1.3% with mixed types (WHO II, 4). Liver metastases were found in 21% of the patients with adequate liver biopsy. In addition macroscopic signs of liver metastases were observed in 9%. No significant differences were observed among the histological subtypes. Liver function tests, such as alkaline phosphatase, LDH and GOT, were of little value in excluding liver metastases. On the other hand, 2 of 3 abnormal liver function tests were highly indicative of liver metastases. In patients with positive liver biopsy, 41% had liver metastases alone and 76% had no other evidence of distant metastatic disease if bone-marrow involvement identified with bone marrow examination is excluded as a staging procedure.
Cancer 1978 May
PMID:Peritoneoscopy in the staging of 190 patients with small-cell anaplastic carcinoma of the lung with special reference to subtyping. 20 45

Plasma histaminase (PH) activity only partially reflected the consistently high activity of histaminase in tumor tissue of patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung (SCC). To determine whether heparin might release histaminase from tumor tissue into the circulation as it does from some normal tissues, we studied the response of PH activity to small doses of heparin in 41 patients with SCC and in 57 normal subjects. In patients with SCC, the initial mean PH activity (2.0 U/m) was not different from that in normal subjects (1.7 U/ml). After heparin administration, the mean PH activity was no different between the 2 groups (patients with SCC, 3.1 U/ml; normal subjects, 3.5 U/ml). In both groups, the higher the initial PH activity, the greater the magnitude of the PH activity response to heparin. This relationship was linear (normal subjects, r = 0.88; patients with SCC, r = 0.91). However, in patients with SCC, the increase in post-heparin PH activity, as related to the basal levels, was significantly less than that in normal subjects (P less than 0.001 by analysis of covariance). The data suggested that heparin did not affect the release of histaminase from tumor tissue into plasma to the same degree as it promoted the enzyme's entry from normal tissue sources. The differences between the groups may enable us to differentiate between selected patients with SCC and normal subjects with borderline high PH activity values.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1978 Jun
PMID:Response of plasma histaminase activity to heparin in normal subjects and in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung. 20 3

Brain involvement in small cell carcinoma of the lung is a common phenomenon occurring in from 29 to 45% of patients. Because of this, it was suggested that prophylactic brain irradiation be made a part of treatment plans for small cell carcinoma. In December 1974, the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) began treating patients with combination chemotherapy and irradiation of both the primary lesion and whole brain. In two years, there were 390 patients entered into the study. In patients with extensive disease only 6 of 152 prophylactically irradiated patients developed CNS signs or symptoms of CNS recurrence. In limited disease, 6 of 88 prophylactically treated patients had CNS recurrence and in only 4 was this the site of initial failure. We feel prophylactic brain irradiation in small cell carcinoma of the lung is of benefit.
Cancer 1978 Jun
PMID:The effectiveness of prophylactic brain irradiation in small cell carcinoma of the lung: a Southwest Oncology Group study. 20 6

One hundred human primary lung carcinomas were studied by light and electron microscopy and by light microscopic histochemistry to demonstrate mucosubstances. The tumors were classified histogenetically and were grouped into three major categories depending on their cell of origin: 1) tumors from basal and/or mucous cells; 2) tumors from neurosecretory cells; and 3) tumors from Clara cells. Most carcinomas (88%) arose from basal and/or mucous cells. These were subdivided into epidermoid carcinomas (21%), combined epidermoid and adenocarcinomas (46%), and adenocarcinomas (21%). The criteria for epidermoid differentiation included the presence of tonofilament bundles, poorly developed endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, and well-developed desmosomes. The criteria for adeno differentiation included well-developed endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus, poorly developed desmosomes, the presence of extracellular and/or intracellular alveoli, and/or other evidence of cellular secretion such as secretory granules. In adenocarcinomas with extracellular alveoli, typical junctional complexes were also present at the luminal aspect where the cell apexes bordered the alveolus. With these criteria, combined epidermoid and adenocarcinomas were the most common type of lung carcinoma. We anticipate that the new data will clarify categories such as small cell anaplastic carcinoma and large cell carcinoma of the World Health Organization classification. In addition, the histogenetic classification of lung tumors may be of value in the future in studies of risk factors, prognosis, prevention, and treatment of lung cancer.
J Natl Cancer Inst 1978 Aug
PMID:The respiratory epithelium. V. Histogenesis of lung carcinomas in the human. 21 Feb 96

The ability of tumor markers to improve cancer therapy is not established. We studied a man with a human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG)-secreting large cell carcinoma of the lung and gynecomastia. Preoperatively, levels of HCG (109 ng/ml), its alpha and beta subunits (3.2 and 21 ng/ml, respectively) and plasma estradiol were elevated. Despite apparently complete tumor resection and total resolution of gynecomastia, HCG titers remained elevated (3.3 ng/ml), heralding tumor recurrence three weeks later. Because the pathophysiologic consequences of the ectopic secretion of HCG on pituitary function are not established, we administered 100 microgram of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (LHRH) and observed a markedly delayed increase in pituitary gonadotropins. Early chemotherapy, guided by persistence of HCG, reduced HCG to undetectable levels, restored to normal the response to LHRH and resulted in a distinctly unusual 30-month complete remission. Use of HCG as a tumor marker levels is more sensitive than the symptom of gynecomastia and may permit detection of small, potentially curable tumor foci.
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PMID:Ectopic secretion of chorionic gonadotropin by a lung carcinoma. Pituitary gonadotropin and subunit secretion and prolonged chemotherapeutic remission. 21 Jun 65

Immune complexes could be isolated from sera of 7 patients with oat-cell carcinoma of the lung, but not from 5 normal controls, using zonal ultracentrifugation. After ultracentrifugation, fractions containing macromolecular IgG were absorbed on a protein A-sepharose column and the immune complexes were eluted and dissociated by glycin-HCl buffer at pH 3.5. The eluates were tested for the presence of tumour-associated proteins as carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), non-specific crossreacting antigen (NCA), alpha2 pregnancy associated antigen (alpha2PAG) and isoferritin. Whereas none of these tumour-associated antigens could be demonstrated, an ACTH-like activity was detected in the immune-complex fractions of 4 patients with oat-cell carcinoma, by radioimmuno- and bioassay. Polyacrylamide electrophoresis of an immune-complex fraction from a patient with Cushing syndrome showed ACTH-like activities, with mol. wt of 110,000, 75,000, 30,000 and less than 20,000 (all glycoproteins) indicating the presence of different subfractions of big ACTH.
Br J Cancer 1979 Jan
PMID:ACTH-like activity in immune complexes of patients with oat-cell carcinoma of the lung. 21 84

An unusually high association of other primary cancers (9.7%) was found during the analysis of 403 consecutive cases of carcinoma of the lung diagnosed at DGMC between 1960 and 1975. Incidence by stage included 17.3% for Stage I (75 cases) and 16.9% for Stage II (59 cases). Median survival by stage was not adversely affected by the associated malignancy. Incidence by histologic type was 15.6% for adenocarcinoma (132 cases), 7.7% for epidermoid (130 cases), 1.5% for oat (small cell) (67 cases), 12.5% for large cell (40 cases) and 11.8% for undifferentiated anaplastic type (34 cases). Of 31 cases of Stage I adenocarcinoma, 9 (29%) had second malignancies. Both adenocarcinoma and epidermoid carcinoma exhibited decreasing association of second malignances with increasing stage of lung cancer. The head and neck region was the location of the nonlung malignancy in 22 cases and the GU system in 11 cases. Two cases each of colon carcinoma and basal cell skin carcinoma were found and there was one case each of carcinoma of the pancreas, lymphoma and melanoma. The diagnosis of lung cancer was made first in only 3 instances. The appearance of solitary nodules in patients with known malignancy should receive strong consideration for vigorous diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Future studies should consider carcinogenic stimuli that may be common etiologic factors in both malignancies.
Cancer 1978 Dec
PMID:Lung cancer as a second primary. 21


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