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)

Sarcomatoid carcinomas of the lung are uncommon malignant biphasic tumors composed of carcinomatous and sarcomatous components. The carcinomatous component is usually a squamous carcinoma, and the sarcomatous component usually resembles a fibrosarcoma or a malignant fibrous histiocytoma. The presence of rhabdomyoblastic differentiation in such neoplasms is exceedingly rare, with only seven documented cases. This report describes a unique case of sarcomatoid carcinoma in a 52-year-old woman in whom the sarcomatous component of the tumor was a rhabdomyosarcoma and the carcinomatous component was an atypical carcinoid. The authors know of no previous report of a sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung in which the carcinomatous component is a carcinoid.
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PMID:Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung. A case with atypical carcinoid and rhabdomyosarcomatous components. 808 61

30 cases of resected pulmonary neuroendocrine carcinoma (NEC) collected from September 1983 to February 1992 were confirmed by microscopy, electron microscopy and immunohistochemical observations. Of the 30 cases, 8 were typical carcinoid (TC), 15 atypical carcinoid (AC), 5 small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) and 2 cases of giant cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC), which have never been reported in the literature. This series of pulmonary NEC exhibited their specific morphology under light microscope. Electron microscopic examination found the common feature of neuroendocrine granules in the cytoplasm of carcinoma cells. Immunohistochemical studies with neuroendocrine cell markers for NEC gave positive results. The morphological features and differential diagnosis of the various NEC under light microscope and electron microscope were compared and are discussed. Complimental devise to the classification of NECs of the lung is suggested.
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PMID:[Morphological and immunohistochemical observations on 30 cases of neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung]. 816 74

Nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) were investigated in lung carcinomas by silver staining. This method was applied to 111 lung carcinoma specimens, including 40 with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), 42 with adenocarcinoma (ADENO), 8 with adenosquamous carcinoma (ADESQ), 8 with small cell carcinoma (SMCC), 6 with large cell carcinoma (LGCC), and 7 with typical carcinoid tumors (CAOID). The mean AgNOR counts of ADENO, SCC, ADESQ, SMCC, and LGCC were significantly higher than those of the normal bronchial surface and those of the glandular or alveolar epithelium. The mean AgNOR count of CAOID was significantly higher than those of the normal glandular and alveolar epithelium but not that of the surface epithelium. The mean AgNOR count of SCC was significantly higher than that of bronchial squamous metaplasia, and the count of SMCC was significantly higher than that of CAOID. Within the same cancer category, the mean number of AgNORs increased in parallel with the histological tumor grades. These results indicate that the AgNOR method is useful for differentiating lung carcinoma from its normal counterparts and for evaluating histological tumor grades in the same lineage of lung carcinoma.
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PMID:Demonstration of nucleolar organizer regions in lung carcinoma by silver staining. 835 92

Neuroendocrine tumors of lung, including typical carcinoid (TC), atypical carcinoid (AC), large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC), and small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) constitute a spectrum of malignancies in which the pathologist at times has difficulty in discerning tumor subtype and aggressiveness in a reproducible fashion. Therefore, 59 primary neuroendocrine lung tumors including 10 TCs, 26 ACs, 15 LCNECs, and 8 SCLCs were selected from cases collected from 1976 to 1988 and immunostained for p53 protein. All of these tumors were also genotyped for specific point mutational damage affecting p53 (exons 5, 7, and 8; with ACs additionally sequenced for p53 exon 6); 13 tumors for K-ras-2 (exon 1); and 31 tumors for c-raf-1 (exon 15) growth-regulatory genes. Genotyping was performed on topographically selected, minute tumor samples removed from unstained formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections (topographic genotyping) using polymerase chain reaction and direct sequencing. The distribution of p53 immunohistochemical staining had four patterns: negative in TCs, one-half of ACs, 3 of 15 LCNECs, and 1 of 8 SCLCs; less than 10% but more than five tumor cells per 10 high power fields (focal) in a subset (7 of 26) of aggressive ACs; 10 to 49% of tumor cells (patchy) in a subset (6 of 26) of ACs with a higher grade of aggressiveness; and 50 to 100% of tumor cells (diffuse), exclusively seen in LCNECs (12 of 15) and SCLCs (7 of 8). Three patterns of immunohistochemical staining intensity of p53 protein were seen: negative, weak or mild, and moderate to marked. SCLCs and LCNECs accounted for cases of moderate to marked staining and were the only ones to have mutations in p53 exons 5, 7, or 8. No mutations were found in AC and TC, showing absent to weak staining and no staining, respectively. The difference in distribution and staining intensities between LCNEC and SCLC compared with AC and TC was statistically significant (P < 0.001). Patients having AC with patchy p53 immunostaining usually had survival limited to 3 years, whereas those having AC with focal p53 immunostaining subsequently developed metastatic or recurrence of AC disease (P < 0.05). The absence of point mutations in cases with patchy or focal immunostaining suggests increased expression of wild-type p53 tumor suppressor protein likely in response to growth deregulation in a more aggressive subtype of AC. A novel hypothesis is presented in regard to these findings. K-ras-2 and c-raf-1 gene sequence analysis showed no evidence of point mutational change in any of the tumors studied. The TC and AC categories are therefore genetically distinct from the higher grade neuroendocrine SCLC and LCNEC. Immunohistochemistry for p53 on AC lung tumors may be helpful to delineate cases at higher risk for aggressive behavior. Additionally, although LCNEC is categorized as a non-small-cell carcinoma, it is more akin genetically and immunohistochemically to SCLC.
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PMID:Analysis of p53, K-ras-2, and C-raf-1 in pulmonary neuroendocrine tumors. Correlation with histological subtype and clinical outcome. 862 22

Although chromosome 3p regions are the most frequent site for genetic alterations in small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) and non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), the extent of such abnormality in carcinoid tumors remained to be investigated. Moreover, the histogenetic and biological implications of these findings in non-carcinoid lung tumors remain unclear. We studied eight microsatellite loci on chromosome 3p regions by multiplex polymerase chain reaction in paired normal and tumor DNA from 17 carcinoid tumors, 5 SCLCs, and 38 NSCLCs to determine the histogenetic and the clinical significance of their alterations in these neoplasms. Our results revealed a lack of microsatellite abnormalities at all loci tested in both typical and atypical carcinoid tumors. SCLCs and NSCLCs showed loss of heterozygosity in 100% (5/5) and 58.0% (22/38), respectively. Loss of heterozygosity at more than two loci correlated significantly with poor histological differentiation and were preponderantly found in high proliferative index and DNA aneuploid NSCLCs. Microsatellite instability was noted in only one (1.7%) of the lesions. Our study suggests that 1) the difference in chromosome 3p alterations between carcinoid tumors and SCLCs favors a stochastic rather than linear evolution of these tumors, 2) 3p alterations may constitute an initial event in the development of small cell carcinomas, and 3) loss of heterozygosity at 3p loci is associated with aggressive tumor characteristics in non-small-cell carcinomas.
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PMID:Microsatellite alteration at chromosome 3p loci in neuroendocrine and non-neuroendocrine lung tumors. Histogenetic and clinical relevance. 870 99

Immunohistochemical expression of p53, bcl-2, CD44 standard (CD44S), and the v6 isoform of CD44 (CD44v6) proteins were studied in 14 typical carcinoid tumors (TCs), 11 atypical carcinoids (ACs), and eight small cell carcinomas (SCLCs) in an attempt to use these markers of mutational events and cellular adhesion to discriminate neoplasms demonstrating neuroendocrine differentiation. p53 and bcl-2 overexpression were associated with more aggressive neuroendocrine cell types. p53 nuclear staining was weakly positive in 21% of the TCs, whereas strong nuclear staining was seen in 64% of the ACs and 88% of the SCLCs (P = 0.0047). bcl-2 was present in 21% of the TCs, 91% of the ACs, and 100% of the SCLCs (P = 0.0001). In contrast, CD44S and CD44v6 were inversely correlated with more aggressive types of neuroendocrine tumors. CD44S expression was moderate to strong in all of the TCs and 91% of the ACs but in only 37% of the SCLCs (P = 0.0018). There was no correlation between expression of these markers and tumor size or nodal status, although loss of CD44v6 was associated with lymph node metastases in the TC group only. In the spectrum of neuroendocrine tumors of the lung, p53 and bcl-2 overexpression correlates with more aggressive histologic cell types. The decreasing CD44S expression in AC and SCLC is similar to findings in cancer of the colon and in non-small cell carcinoma of the lung, where loss of CD44S is associated with poor prognosis. In AC and SCLC, but not in cancer of the colon, loss of CD44v6 correlates with more aggressive neoplasms and might correlate with lymph node metastases in TCs.
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PMID:Bcl-2, p53, CD44, and CD44v6 isoform expression in neuroendocrine tumors of the lung. 873 62

Transient pulmonary neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia and non-neuroendocrine lung tumors develop in nitrosaminetreated hamsters, which we hypothesized might modulate epithelial cell phenotype by expressing gene(s) homologous to human chromosome 3p gene(s) deleted in small cell carcinoma of the lung (SCLC). We differentially screened a chromosome 3 library using nitrosamine-treated versus normal hamster lung cDNAs and identified hepatocyte growth factor-like/macrophage-stimulating protein (HGFL/MSP) in injured lung. HGFL/MSP mRNA is low to undetectable in human SCLC and carcinoid tumors, but the HGFL/MSP tyrosine kinase receptor, RON, is present and functional on many of these neuroendocrine tumors. In H835, a pulmonary carcinoid cell line, and H187, a SCLC cell line, HGFL/ MSP induced adhesion/flattening and apoptosis. Using viable cell counts to assess proliferation after 14 d of treatment with HGFL/MSP, there is growth inhibition of H835 but not H187. Nitrosamine-treated hamsters also demonstrate pulmonary neuroendocrine cell apoptosis in situ during the same time period as expression of the endogenous HGFL/ MSP gene, immediately preceding the spontaneous regression of neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia. These observations suggest that HGFL/MSP might regulate neuroendocrine cell survival during preneoplastic lung injury, which could influence the ultimate tumor cell phenotype.
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PMID:Differential screening of a human chromosome 3 library identifies hepatocyte growth factor-like/macrophage-stimulating protein and its receptor in injured lung. Possible implications for neuroendocrine cell survival. 918 22

To investigate the role of telomerase in the multistage pathogenesis of lung cancer, we examined 205 fresh and archival tissue samples obtained from 40 patients, 34 of whom had invasive lung carcinoma, 5 with carcinoma in situ (CIS) without invasion, and 1 without lung carcinoma. We analyzed samples for telomerase enzyme activity using the semiquantitative PCR-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol assay (131 samples) or by a radioactive in situ hybridization method for expression of the RNA component of human telomerase (hTR; 74 samples). A subset of samples was assayed by both methods, and the correlation was excellent (30 of 36; 83%). With the exception of a carcinoid tumor and a necrotic squamous cell carcinoma, all tumor cells were moderate to strongly positive for both hTR and telomerase activity, except for foci of keratinization in squamous cell carcinomas. Telomerase positivity, with weak enzyme activity and/or low hTR expression, was present in basal epithelial cells of large bronchi, both histologically normal (26%) and hyperplastic (71%), and in 23% of peripheral lung samples (in epithelium of small bronchi and bronchioles or lymphoid aggregates). More advanced epithelial changes (metaplasia, dysplasia, and CIS) were associated with telomerase dysregulation. Dysregulation in preneoplasia was manifested in three ways: almost all such lesions expressed hTR, although enzyme activity levels were several-fold lower than in the corresponding invasive tumors; cells throughout these multilayered processes expressed hTR; and intense, focal up-regulation of hTR occurred in CIS foci in the vicinity of invasive cancers. Alveolar cells and areas of atypical adenomatous hyperplasia (possible precursor lesions for peripheral adenocarcinomas) were negative. Our studies demonstrate that dysregulation of telomerase occurs early in the multistage pathogenesis of bronchogenic lung carcinomas and that intense focal localized hTR expression in CIS may indicate imminent invasion.
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PMID:Telomerase expression in respiratory epithelium during the multistage pathogenesis of lung carcinomas. 919 12

Neuroendocrine-specific protein (NSP)-reticulons are endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein complexes, which have been identified as markers for neuroendocrine differentiation. In this study, the expression of two members of the family of NSP-reticulons, NSP-A and NSP-C, have been investigated in different types of lung cancer and compared with the expression patterns of five conventional neuroendocrine markers, the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), synaptophysin, chromogranin A, Leu-7, and neurofilament proteins. NSP-A and NSP-C antibodies were reactive with most carcinoid tumour and small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) cases, while atypical carcinoid tumours showed a variable expression. In the total group of neuroendocrine tumours, a high concordance of expression was found between NSP-A and NSP-C, while their expression correlated well with NCAM and synaptophysin positivity. Chromogranin A, Leu-7, and neurofilament proteins were shown to be expressed to a limited extent in these neuroendocrine tumours. In a selected group of non-SCLCs known to exhibit neuroendocrine features, NSP-A expression was detected at much higher frequency than NSP-C. In virtually all NSP-A positive cases, this expression was associated with one or more of the other neuroendocrine markers. NSP-A expression showed a stronger correlation with conventional neuroendocrine markers than NCAM. In detecting neuroendocrine differentiation in non-SCLC, NSP-A is more sensitive than synaptophysin, chromogranin A, Leu-7, and neurofilament proteins. It is concluded that NSP-reticulons are valuable markers in the diagnosis of neuroendocrine differentiation in non-SCLC and should be used in conjunction with NCAM.
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PMID:A comparison of NSP-reticulons with conventional neuroendocrine markers in immunophenotyping of lung cancers. 922 37

Chromogranin A (CgA) is gaining acceptance as a serum marker of neuroendocrine tumors. Its specificity in differentiating between neuroendocrine and nonneuroendocrine tumors, its sensitivity to detect small tumors, and its clinical value, compared with other neuroendocrine markers, have not clearly been defined, however. The objectives of this study were to evaluate the clinical usefulness of CgA as neuroendocrine serum marker. Serum levels of CgA, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), and the alpha-subunit of glycoprotein hormones (alpha-SU) were determined in 211 patients with neuroendocrine tumors and 180 control subjects with nonendocrine tumors. The concentrations of CgA, NSE, and alpha-SU were elevated in 50%, 43%, and 24% of patients with neuroendocrine tumors, respectively. Serum CgA was most frequently increased in subjects with gastrinomas (100%), pheochromocytomas (89%), carcinoid tumors (80%), nonfunctioning tumors of the endocrine pancreas (69%), and medullary thyroid carcinomas (50%). The highest levels were observed in subjects with carcinoid tumors. NSE was most frequently elevated in patients with small cell lung carcinoma (74%), and alpha-SU was most frequently elevated in patients with carcinoid tumors (39%). Most subjects with elevated alpha-SU levels also had elevated CgA concentrations. A significant positive relationship was demonstrated between the tumor load and serum CgA levels (P < 0.01, by chi 2 test). Elevated concentrations of CgA, NSE, and alpha-SU were present in, respectively, 7%, 35%, and 15% of control subjects. Markedly elevated serum levels of CgA, exceeding 300 micrograms/L, were observed in only 2% of control patients (n = 3) compared to 40% of patients with neuroendocrine tumors (n = 76). We conclude that CgA is the best general neuroendocrine serum marker available. It has the highest specificity for the detection of neuroendocrine tumors compared to the other neuroendocrine markers, NSE and alpha-SU. Elevated levels are strongly correlated with tumor volume; therefore, small tumors may go undetected. Although its specificity cannot compete with that of the specific hormonal secretion products of most neuroendocrine tumors, it can have useful clinical applications in subjects with neuroendocrine tumors for whom either no marker is available or the marker is inconvenient for routine clinical use.
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PMID:Chromogranin A as serum marker for neuroendocrine neoplasia: comparison with neuron-specific enolase and the alpha-subunit of glycoprotein hormones. 925 44


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