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

Through immunohistochemical techniques, blood coagulation factors were identified in situ in fresh frozen sections of small cell carcinoma of the lung. Prothrombin/thrombin, factor VII, factor X, and antithrombin III were present in intercellular spaces and associated with tumor cells. Factor IX, factor XI, prekallikrein, and high molecular weight kininogen were identified as being associated with tumor cells but did not exist in intercellular spaces. Variable connective tissue staining but no tumor-related staining was observed for factor V, factor VIII-related antigen, factor XII, the B subunit of factor XIII, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, or alpha 2-antiplasmin. Neither consecutive tissue nor the tumor manifested platelet Ib and IIbIIIa surface glycoproteins. These divergent staining patterns suggested that the detected clotting factors had not merely diffused from permeabilized blood vessels, but were selectively localized in situ. While conditions may exist within tumor tissue that both retard and promote thrombin generation, we propose that interactions between the observed coagulation factors ultimately lead to local thrombin formation, which is responsible for the conspicuous fibrin deposits already described in small cell carcinoma of the lung. Thrombin formed locally might contribute to progression of this tumor. Inhibition of local thrombin formation by warfarin therapy could explain the beneficial effects of warfarin therapy in treating small cell carcinoma of the lung.
...
PMID:Occurrence of blood coagulation factors in situ in small cell carcinoma of the lung. 282 13

Molecular testing in anatomic pathology is going to become more and more important during the next decade as we develop assays that can aid in diagnosis, prognosis, and predicting response to therapy. The anatomic pathologist needs to be familiar with the different assays available but also needs to be able to discern which are going to become standard of care and which will not. Three different types of tumors are reviewed: thyroid cancer, oligodendroglioma, and lung carcinoma. Molecular assays that are currently in use or on the near horizon, including translocation analyses for RET-PTC and PPARgamma-PAX8, point mutation analysis for BRAF and epidermal growth factor receptor, and genetic loss for 1p and 19q, are discussed.
...
PMID:Molecular testing in solid tumors: an overview. 1825 69