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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (
lung carcinoma
)
23,830
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tumor angiogenesis is essential for tumor growth and metastasis formation. Luminex methodology was used to measure the levels of four angiogenic cytokines in cell culture medium and in the plasma of mice bearing human tumors. We obtained plasma and conditioned culture medium from 12 different human tumor cell lines. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) were determined by the Luminex FlowMetrix assay. VEGF, TNF-alpha, and bFGF were undetectable in non-tumor-bearing animals. HS746T gastric cancer and Caki-1
renal cell cancer
cells in culture produced high levels of VEGF (1000 and 450 pg/10(6) cells, respectively). High levels of TGF-beta were produced by HS746T gastric carcinoma and Calu-6 non-small-cell
lung carcinoma
(3000 and 1000 pg/10(6) cells, respectively). Caki-1
renal cell carcinoma
and Calu-6 non-small-cell
lung carcinoma
cells in culture produced high levels of bFGF (42 and 10 pg/10(6) cells, respectively). Caki-1, SW2 SCLC, HCT-116 and HT-29 colon tumors produced high plasma levels of VEGF (200, 220, 42, and 151 pg/ml, respectively) and TGF-beta (31, 36, 45, 32 pg/ml, respectively). A positive linear correlation was seen between tumor volume and VEGF in SW2 (r=0.87) and Caki-1 (r=0.47) tumors, and a moderate correlation in HCT116 tumors (r=0.3). Angiogenic profiles in the plasma of nude mice bearing human tumors may be useful to identify appropriate biomarkers for antiangiogenic therapy, as diagnostic and prognostic tools, and to monitor the responses of individual tumors to antiangiogenic therapy.
...
PMID:Circulating angiogenic growth factor levels in mice bearing human tumors using Luminex Multiplex technology. 1272 60
Despite advancements in therapeutic regimens, the prognosis remains poor for patients with malignant gliomas. Specificity has been an elusive goal for current modalities, but immunotherapy has emerged as a potential means of designing more tumor-specific treatments. Dendritic cells (DC) are the specialized antigen presenting cells of the immune system and have served now as a platform for therapeutic immunizations against such cancers as lymphoma, multiple myeloma, melanoma, prostate cancer,
renal cell carcinoma
, non-small cell
lung carcinoma
, colon cancer, and even malignant gliomas. DC-based immunizations offer a number of advantages over traditional immunotherapeutic approaches to brain tumors, approaches that have proved promising despite concerns over central nervous system immune privilege and glioma-mediated immunosuppression. The future success of clinical trials will depend on the optimization and standardizing of procedures for DC generation, loading, and administration.
...
PMID:The history, evolution, and clinical use of dendritic cell-based immunization strategies in the therapy of brain tumors. 1295 97
Inhibition of the vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF-VEGF receptor (VEGF-R) kinase axes in the tumor angiogenic cascade is a promising therapeutic strategy in oncology. CEP-7055 is the fully synthetic orally active N,N-dimethyl glycine ester of CEP-5214, a C3-(isopropylmethoxy) fused pyrrolocarbazole with potent pan-VEGF-R kinase inhibitory activity. CEP-5214 demonstrates IC(50) values of 18 nM, 12 nM, and 17 nM against human VEGF-R2/KDR kinase, VEGF-R1/FLT-1 kinase, and VEGF-R3/FLT-4 kinase, respectively, in biochemical kinase assays. CEP-5214 inhibited VEGF-stimulated VEGF-R2/KDR autophosphorylation in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) with an IC (50) of approximately 10 nM and demonstrated an equivalent inhibition of murine FLK-1 autophosphorylation in transformed SVR endothelial cells. Evaluation of the antiangiogenic activity of CEP-5214 revealed a dose-related inhibition of microvessel growth ex vivo in rat aortic ring explant cultures and in vitro on HUVEC capillary-tube formation on Matrigel at low nanomolar concentrations. The antiangiogenic activity of CEP-5214 in these bioassays was observed in the absence of apparent cytotoxicity. Single-dose p.o. or s.c. administration of CEP-7055 or CEP-5214 to CD-1 mice at 23.8 mg/kg/dose b.i.d. resulted in a reversible inhibition of VEGF-R2/FLK-1 phosphorylation in murine lung tissues. Administration p.o. of CEP-7055 at 2.57 to 23.8 mg/kg/dose b.i.d. resulted in dose-related reductions in neovascularization in vivo in porcine aortic endothelial cell (PAEC)-VEGF/basic fibroblast growth factor-Matrigel implants in nude mice (maximum, 82% inhibition), significant reductions in granuloma formation (30%) and granuloma vascularity (42%) in a murine chronic inflammation-induced angiogenesis model, and significant and sustained (6 h) inhibition of VEGF-induced plasma extravasation in rats, with an ED(50) of 20 mg/kg/dose. Chronic p.o. administration of CEP-7055 at doses of 11.9 to 23.8 mg/kg/dose b.i.d. resulted in significant inhibition (50-90% maximum inhibition relative to controls) in the growth of a variety of established murine and human s.c. tumor xenografts in nude mice, including A375 melanomas, U251MG and U87MG glioblastomas, CALU-6
lung carcinoma
, ASPC-1 pancreatic carcinoma, HT-29 and HCT-116 colon carcinomas, MCF-7 breast carcinomas, and SVR angiosarcomas. Significant antitumor efficacy was observed similarly against orthotopically implanted LNCaP human prostate carcinomas in male nude mice and orthotopically implanted
renal carcinoma
(RENCA) tumors in BALB/c mice, in terms of a significant reduction in the metastatic score and the extent of pulmonary metastases. These antitumor responses were associated with marked increases in tumor apoptosis, and significant reductions in intratumoral microvessel density (CD34 and Factor VIII staining) of 22-38% relative to controls depending on the specific tumor xenograft. The antitumor efficacy of chronic CEP-7055 administration was independent of initial tumor volume (in the ASPC-1 pancreatic carcinoma model) and reversible on withdrawal of treatment. Chronic p.o. administration of CEP-7055 in preclinical efficacy studies for periods of up to 65 days was well tolerated with no apparent toxicity or significant morbidity. Orally administered CEP-7055 has entered Phase I clinical trials in cancer patients.
...
PMID:CEP-7055: a novel, orally active pan inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases with potent antiangiogenic activity and antitumor efficacy in preclinical models. 1452 25
Tumors expressing a high level of certain types of tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens (TACAs) exhibit greater metastasis and progression than those expressing low level of TACAs, as reflected in decreased patient survival rate. Well-documented examples of such TACAs are: (i) H/Le(y)/Le(a) in primary non-small cell
lung carcinoma
; (ii) sialyl-Le(x) (SLe(x)) and sialyl-Le(a) (SLe(a)) in various types of cancer; (iii) Tn and sialyl-Tn in colorectal, lung, breast, and many other cancers; (iv) GM2, GD2, and GD3 gangliosides in neuroectodermal tumors (melanoma and neuroblastoma); (v) globo-H in breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer; (vi) disialylgalactosylgloboside in
renal cell carcinoma
. Some glycosylations and TACAs suppress invasiveness and metastatic potential. Well-documented examples are: (i) blood group A antigen in primary
lung carcinoma
; (ii) bisecting beta1 --> 4GlcNAc of N-linked structure in melanoma and other cancers; (iii) galactosylgloboside (GalGb4) in seminoma. The biochemical mechanisms by which the above glycosylation changes promote or suppress tumor metastasis and invasion are mostly unknown. A few exceptional cases in which we have some knowledge are: (i) SLe(x) and SLe(a) function as E-selectin epitopes promoting tumor cell interaction with endothelial cells; (ii) some tumor cells interact through binding of TACA to specific proteins other than selectin, or to specific carbohydrate expressed on endothelial cells or other target cells (carbohydrate-carbohydrate interaction); (iii) functional modification of adhesive receptor (integrin, cadherin, CD44) by glycosylation. So far, a few successful cases of anti-cancer vaccine in clinical trials have been reported, employing TACAs whose expression enhances malignancy. Examples are STn for suppression of breast cancer, GM2 and GD3 for melanoma, and globo-H for prostate cancer. Vaccine development canbe extended using other TACAs, with the following criteria for success: (i) the antigen is expressed highly on tumor cells; (ii) high antibody production depending on two factors: (a) clustering of antigen used in vaccine; (b) choice of appropriate carrier protein or lipid; (iii) high T cell response depending on choice of appropriate carrier protein or lipid; (iv) expression of the same antigen in normal epithelial tissues (e.g., renal, intestinal, colorectal) may not pose a major obstacle, i.e., these tissues are not damaged during immune response. Idiotypic anti-carbohydrate antibodies that mimic the surface profile of carbohydrate antigens, when administered to patients, elicit anti-carbohydrate antibody response, thus providing an effect similar to that of TACAs for suppression of tumor progression. An extension of this idea is the use of peptide mimetics of TACAs, based on phage display random peptide library. Although examples are so far highly limited, use of such "mimotopes" as immunogens may overcome the weak immunogenicity of TACAs in general.
...
PMID:Tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens defining tumor malignancy: basis for development of anti-cancer vaccines. 1453 9
Angiogenesis plays an important role in tumor growth. Angiogenic growth factors may be useful as biomarkers of antiangiogenic activity since their plasma concentrations correlate with the efficacy of treatments directed toward angiogenic targets. SW2 small-cell
lung carcinoma
(SCLC), Caki-1
renal cell carcinoma
and HCT-116 colon carcinoma tumors produce measurable plasma VEGF, bFGF and TGFbeta in nude mice. Mice bearing these human tumor xenografts were treated orally twice daily with the PKCbeta inhibitor, LY317615 (days 14-30 for SW2 and HCT116, and days 21-39 for Caki-1). Plasma was collected every 3 days from control and treated mice. LY317615 significantly decreased plasma VEGF levels in mice bearing SW2 SCLC and Caki-1
renal cell carcinoma
compared to control plasma concentrations beginning 5-7 days after initiating therapy. VEGF plasma levels remained suppressed after termination of LY317615 treatment and for the duration of the study (an additional 2 to 3 weeks). Plasma VEGF levels in mice bearing HCT116 xenografts were not altered by LY317615 treatment and plasma bFGF and TGF-beta were not altered by LY317615 in any of the animals. As shown by CD31 immunohistochemical staining, LY317615 decreased intratumoral vessel density by nearly 40% in all three tumors. Only the Caki-1 tumor responded to single-agent LY317615 therapy with a measurable tumor growth delay. Thus, unexpectedly inhibition of PKCbeta in vivo led to decreased VEGF production that persisted after therapy as well as to decreased intratumoral vessels. Plasma VEGF was a weak marker of response to LY317615, and plasma bFGF and TGFbeta were not markers of LY317615 activity.
...
PMID:LY317615 decreases plasma VEGF levels in human tumor xenograft-bearing mice. 1459 97
Previous studies indicate that the nonclassical class I HLA-G antigen, whose physiologic expression is mainly restricted to placenta, is upregulated in melanoma,
renal carcinoma
,
lung carcinoma
, glioblastoma and ovarian carcinoma, where its inhibitory effect on cytotoxic effector cells function is thought to participate in immune evasion by tumor cells. To define whether this expression was a specific feature of melanocytic malignant transformation, 174 paraffin-embedded melanocytic lesions including naevi, lentigo, primary and metastatic melanomas were analyzed for HLA-G and other HLA class I and class II antigen expression. HLA-G antigen expression in melanocytic cells was found to be significantly higher (p < 0.0003) in melanoma (22/79, 28%) than in naevi (1/70, 1.4%), suggesting that upregulation of HLA-G is associated with malignant transformation in this cell type. Further identification of HLA-G antigen expression in inflammatory infiltrating cells results in an overall frequency of HLA-G expressing cells that is higher in melanoma (28/79, 35.5%) than in naevi (5/60, 8.3%) or lentigo (2/23, 8.7%). Upregulation of HLA-G or HLA class II molecules in melanocytic cells thus appears as a better predictor of malignancy than classical HLA class I antigen defects, which are often described as an important mechanism used by tumor cells to evade immune surveillance. Furthermore, HLA-G expression was electively found in lesions that exhibited a high inflammatory infiltrate as well as in patients displaying HLA-A1 genotype. These findings may provide new insights in the comprehension of tumor progression and design of therapeutic approaches aimed at enhancing antitumor immune responses in melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Analysis of HLA antigen expression in benign and malignant melanocytic lesions reveals that upregulation of HLA-G expression correlates with malignant transformation, high inflammatory infiltration and HLA-A1 genotype. 1463 10
The clinical features of metastatic gastric tumors (MGTs) have not been well documented. We present a clinical series of nine patients with MGTs. Among 2579 patients with gastric tumors seen between 1992 and 2001, we studied 9 (0.3%) patients with MGT according to a prospective database. The MGTs were diagnosed based on findings in the surgical or endoscopic specimen, and patients with malignant lymphoma or direct invasion from adjacent organs were excluded from the study. MGTs were detected simultaneously with the primary tumors in three and afterward in six patients at 14 to 74 months. The primary tumors included one each of squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus, signet-ring cell carcinoma of the breast, large-cell or small-cell
carcinoma of the lung
,
renal cell carcinoma
, hepatocellular carcinoma, squamous cell or epidermoid carcinoma of the uterus, and melanoma. Multiple organ metastases were present simultaneously in six patients. Although six patients underwent gastrectomy, macroscopic eradication of gastric metastatic disease was accomplished in only four, in whom a UICC R0 resection was possible in only two. Five patients were treated by chemotherapy with no apparent survival benefit. A median survival after MGT diagnosis was 170 days (range 16-892 days) for all cases, 384 days for those who underwent gastrectomy (n = 6), and 27 days for those without active treatment (n = 3) (p = 0.002). The cause of death was multiple organ metastases in most cases. Because multiple metastases are common, the prognosis of MGT is poor even after curative resection. MGT is likely to be a preterminal event, and surgical resection may be useful only for palliation.
...
PMID:Clinical diagnosis of metastatic gastric tumors: clinicopathologic findings and prognosis of nine patients in a single cancer center. 1536 43
Implantation of DA-3 mammary tumor cells into BALB/c mice results in tumor growth, metastatic lesions, and death. These cells were transfected with genes encoding for either the transmembrane (DA-3/TM) or secreted (DA-3/sec) form of human mucin 1 (MUC1). Although the gene for the secreted form lacks the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains, the 5' sequences of these mucins are identical; however, the gene for the secreted mucin isoform ends with a sequence encoding for a unique 11 amino acid peptide. The DA-3/TM or DA-3 cells transfected with the neomycin vector only (DA-3/neo) have the same in vivo growth characteristics as the parent cell line. In contrast, DA-3/sec cells fail to grow when implanted in immunocompetent BALB/c animals. DA-3/sec cells implanted in nude mice resulted in tumor development verifying the tumorigenic potential of these cells. Pre-exposure of BALB/c mice to DA-3/sec cells afforded protection against challenge with DA-3/TM or DA-3/neo mammary tumors and the unrelated tumors K7, an osteosarcoma, and RENCA, a
renal cell carcinoma
. Partial protection against subsequent tumor challenges was also achieved by substituting the 11 amino acid peptide found only in the secreted MUC1 isoform, for the live DA-3/sec cells. Notably, the efficacy of this peptide is not strain restricted because it also retarded the growth of Lewis
lung carcinoma
cells in C57 BL/6 mice. These findings reveal that a unique peptide present in the secreted MUC1 has immunoenhancing properties and may be a potential agent for use in immunotherapy.
...
PMID:A unique mucin immunoenhancing peptide with antitumor properties. 1552 Feb 19
This report summarises the epidemiological evidence on the association between tobacco smoking and cancer, which was reviewed by an international group of scientists convened by IARC. Studies published since the 1986 IARC Monograph on "Tobacco smoking" provide sufficient evidence to establish a causal association between cigarette smoking and cancer of the nasal cavities and paranasal sinuses, nasopharynx, stomach, liver, kidney (
renal cell carcinoma
) and uterine cervix, and for adenocarcinoma of the oesophagus and myeloid leukaemia. These sites add to the previously established list of cancers causally associated with cigarette smoking, namely cancer of the lung, oral cavity, pharynx, larynx, oesophagus, pancreas, urinary bladder and renal pelvis. Other forms of tobacco smoking, such as cigars, pipes and bidis, also increase risk for cancer, including cancer of the lung and parts of the upper aerodigestive tract. A meta-analysis of over 50 studies on involuntary smoking among never smokers showed a consistent and statistically significant association between exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and lung cancer risk. Smoking is currently responsible for a third of all cancer deaths in many Western countries. It has been estimated that every other smoker will be killed by tobacco.
Lung Cancer
2004 Aug
PMID:Tobacco smoking and cancer: a brief review of recent epidemiological evidence. 1555 76
In the present work, a novel method for detecting hypoxia in tumors, phosphorescence quenching, was used to evaluate tissue and tumor oxygenation. This technique is based on the concept that phosphorescence lifetime and intensity are inversely proportional to the oxygen concentration in the tissue sample. We used the phosphor Oxyphor G2 to evaluate the oxygen profiles in three murine tumor models: K1735 malignant melanoma, RENCA
renal cell carcinoma
, and Lewis
lung carcinoma
. Oxygen measurements were obtained both as histograms of oxygen distribution within the sample and as an average oxygen pressure within the tissue sampled; the latter allowing real-time oxygen monitoring. Each of the tumor types examined had a characteristic and consistent oxygen profile. K1735 tumors were all well oxygenated, with a peak oxygen pressure of 37.8 +/- 5.1 Torr; RENCA tumors had intermediate oxygen pressures, with a peak oxygen pressure of 24.8 +/- 17.9 Torr; and LLC tumors were all severely hypoxic, with a peak oxygen pressure of 1.8 +/- 1.1 Torr. These results correlated well with measurements of tumor cell oxygenation measured by nitroimidazole (EF5) binding and were consistent with assessments of tumor blood flow by contrast enhanced ultrasound and tumor histology. The results show that phosphorescence quenching is a reliable, reproducible, and noninvasive method capable of providing real-time determination of oxygen concentrations within tumors.
...
PMID:Oxygen distribution in murine tumors: characterization using oxygen-dependent quenching of phosphorescence. 1557 67
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