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)

Immunoreactive ACTH was found in almost all tissue extracts of lung carcinoma from patients without clinical evidence of Cushing's syndrome; i.e. 14 of 15 primary tumors, nine of nine metastatic lymph nodes, and four of four metastatic liver nodules contained immunoreactive ACTH. The incidence of ACTH in extracts of other tumor types was much lower. Comparable normal tissues contained no detectable ACTH. Immunoreactive growth hormone, parathyroid hormone, or gastrin was not found in the same carcinoma tissue. The predominant form of ACTH in the tumor extracts was big ACTH. In pituitary extracts little ACTH predominated.53% of 83 patients with lung carcinoma had afternoon plasma ACTH levels greater than 150 pg/ml; more than 90% of plasmas containing less than 150 pg/ml were obtained from patients who had received radiation therapy or chemotherapy. 31% of 45 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), 28% of 25 patients with other severe lung disease, and 6% of 33 controls had elevated values. Big ACTH predominated in the plasma of patients with lung carcinoma or COPD having elevated ACTH levels. Tissue from the lung of a smoking dog with atypical histologic changes contained immunoreactive ACTH, almost exclusively in the big form, while tissue from another smoking dog that was histologically normal contained no ACTH. Thus ACTH may be present even in precancerous lung lesions. These studies suggest that serial plasma ACTH levels may be of value in screening for, and/or management of, patients with carcinoma of the lung.
...
PMID:Ectopic ACTH production in carcinoma of the lung. 436 Aug 54

Oncofetal aspects of ACTH and pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived peptides were studied immunohistochemically at the light and electron microscopic level in human fetal pituitary glands, pituitary adenomas, and small-cell carcinoma of the lung. ACTH, beta-endorphin, and gamma-MSH were localized in the same cells of both fetal and adult pituitary, as well as in the above-mentioned neoplastic tissues. However, alpha-MSH was observed only in the early fetal pituitary, its concentration decreasing with advancing gestational age. The adult pituitary contained only a few alpha-MSH-positive cells. By immunoelectron microscopy, ACTH in the adult pituitary was localized exclusively in the secretory granules. In fetal pituitary at 9 weeks' gestation, ACTH was localized in the perinuclear spaces (PNS), cisternae of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), Golgi saccules, and secretory granules. The staining pattern of ACTH in these organelles varied from cell to cell. In fetal pituitaries of greater gestational ages, ACTH was localized in secretory granules. The pituitary adenomas mimicked the staining characteristics of the adult pituitary, i.e., negative or only very occasional alpha-MSH staining and localization of ACTH in the secretory granules. The ectopic ACTH-producing tumors showed a staining pattern similar to that of the early fetal pituitary, i.e., positive staining for alpha-MSH and the presence of ACTH in PNS and cisternae of RER.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic localization of ACTH and pro-opiomelanocortin-derived peptides in human developmental and neoplastic cells. 608 43

We describe a woman with metastatic small cell carcinoma of the lung who presented with pituitary apoplexy and hyperprolactinemia. Within seventeen months she developed florid Cushing's syndrome with anasarca, hyperpigmentation, hypertension with marked hypercortisolemia (not suppressible with 8 mg dexamethasone), elevated serum ACTH, hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis, and multiple hepatic metastases. This picture suggested the presence of ectopic ACTH syndrome. She died 26 months after the episode of pituitary apoplexy. Primary small cell carcinoma of the lung was diagnosed post-mortem. Metastases were present in the left lung, regional lymph nodes, heart, liver, bone marrow, sphenoid bone, anterior pituitary and pituitary capsule. Posterior pituitary was normal. There was no evidence of pituitary hyperplasia, of adenoma or of primary pituitary carcinoma. The results suggest the presence of a primary ACTH-producing small cell carcinoma of the lung that metastasized to the parasellar sphenoid bone and then extended to the anterior pituitary and dura to mimic a primary intrasellar cause of pituitary apoplexy and Cushing's syndrome. The case demonstrates how difficult it may be to diagnose the etiology of Cushing's syndrome and it emphasizes a unique variation in the presentation of small cell carcinoma of the lung.
...
PMID:Metastatic small cell carcinoma of the lung presenting as pituitary apoplexy and Cushing's syndrome. 608 26

To elucidate the ectopic hormonal pattern in patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung, plasma ACTH, serum calcitonin, serum gastrin, plasma glucagon, serum insulin, plasma secretin, plasma VIP, serum growth hormone, serum hCG/LH, the total of serum hCG and hCG-beta-subunit,serum alpha-subunit, serum human placental lactogen, urine ADH, urine 5-HIAA, urine VMA, urine HVA, and urine hCG-LH were measured prior to therapy in 75 patients. Twenty-two patients (29%) had elevated plasma ACTH, and 18 of these had concomitant increased values of corticosteroid in a 24-hour urine sample. Forty-eight patients (64%) were found to have elevated serum calcitonin, and one-third of the patients were diagnosed as having the ectopic ADH syndrome. Serum gastrin concentrations were increased in 20% of the patients, but the elevations were marginal in almost all cases. None of the remaining substances was found to be significantly elevated. Concentrations of plasma ACTH, serum calcitonin, and urine ADH were not found to be correlated with the stage of the disease, and no correlation of these substances with the histological subtypes of small cell carcinoma was disclosed.
...
PMID:Hormonal polypeptides and amine metabolites in small cell carcinoma of the lung, with special reference to stage and subtypes. 624 82

The ectopically produced polypeptide hormones ACTH, ADH, and calcitonin were investigated as tumor markers in patients with small-cell carcinoma of the lung (SCC). Plasma ADH concentrations were evaluated separately as well as in relation to concomitantly obtained plasma osmolality levels. No significant nor consistent changes of marker concentrations caused by lysis of tumor cells were found immediately after administration of cytotoxic drugs. After tumor regression, plasma ACTH and serum calcitonin concentrations and inappropriate ADH secretion (plasma ADH levels inappropriately high compared with plasma osmolality) became normal in most cases; however, progressive disease was not followed consistently by changes in plasma ACTH concentrations and occurrence of inappropriate ADH secretion. Contrary to this, among 12 patients with disease progression, serum calcitonin levels increased in ten patients and plasma ADH levels increased in 11 patients. In most cases, however, these changes were only moderate, and serum calcitonin concentrations were found to be increased after tumor regression in patients who had normal pretreatment levels. It is concluded that decisions on treatment of patients with SCC cannot exclusively be based on changes in the concentrations of the polypeptide hormones that might be of ectopic origin.
...
PMID:ACTH, ADH, and calcitonin concentrations as markers of response and relapse in small-cell carcinoma of the lung. 625 49

Continuous cell lines have been established from a variety of biopsy and postmortem species of tumor from patients with small-cell carcinoma of the lung (SCCL) and have been maintained over several years. The medium from the cultures has been assayed for peptide, glycoprotein, and steroid hormones. Significant amounts of 14 hormones including calcitonin, adrenocorticotropin (ACTH), parathormone, luteinizing hormone, chorionic gonadotropin, glucagon, growth hormone, somatostatin, prolactin, beta-endorpin, lipotropin, oxytocin-neurophysin, vasopressin-neurophysin, and estradiol have been demonstrated. Up to ten different hormones have been produced by a single cell line. Most produce ACTH and all evaluated so far produce estradiol. These studies indicate that cells from SCCL have a potential for producing a wide variety of hormones and that this characteristic can be maintained for prolonged periods of culture in vitro.
...
PMID:Hormone production by cultures of small-cell carcinoma of the lung. 626 22

Levels of immunoreactive ACTH and calcitonin (CT), as well as CEA, were determined serially in 144 patients with lung cancer and in 62 patients with metastatic carcinoma to the lungs. Patients with neoplasms not involving the lungs, with nonmalignant blood dyscrasias, and with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were studied, as were normal control subjects. In 55-91% of lung cancer patients, elevated values of CT were detected; the frequency of elevation varied with cell type and stage. The highest values (mean 1346 +/- 2534 pg/ml) were found in patients with extensive small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) and were significantly greater than the values for patients with SCLC confined to one hemithorax (196 +/- 287.7 pg/ml, P less than 0.005). ACTH levels were elevated less frequently (24-46%) and were highest (192 +/- 200.9 pg/ml) in patients with extensive small cell carcinoma, although Cushing's syndrome was observed only once. Agreement between all three tumor markers was seen in 25-50% of lung cancer patients; the percentage depended on cell type. Calcitonin levels paralleled changes in the clinical status and tumor burden in 89% of SCLC patients, while ACTH levels reflected the clinical course in 67%. In six patients with small cell carcinoma in remission, rising levels of CT, ACTH, and CEA preceded clinical evidence of relapse, in oe patient, by as long as five months. Among 129 patients with conditions other than primary lung cancer, CT levels were highest (232 +/- 328 pg/ml) in those with cancer metastatic to the lungs and/or pleura; there was no; association between CT levels and the presence of bone metastases.
...
PMID:A study of immunoreactive calcitonin (CT), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in lung cancer and other malignancies. 626 70

The case of a patient with small-cell carcinoma of the lung, bone marrow metastases, and hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy is reported. Normal growth hormone serum concentrations contrasted with significant increases in ACTH, beta-MSH, calcitonin, and gastrin. A hormonal etiology has previously been suggested for hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy. Our findings indicate that the hormone responsible for hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy may be an APUD polypeptidic substance, that differs from immunoreactive GH but is related to somatomammotropins.
...
PMID:[Hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy with paraneoplastic secretion of four hormones. Considerations on pathogenesis (author's transl)]. 627 40

beta-Endorphin, a pituitary morphino-mimetic peptide, was identified in a culture medium derived from a human corticotropic adenoma. Secretion products from cultured human cells derived from a small-cell carcinoma of the lung were shown to contain a high molecular weight precursor analagous to pro-opiocortin: this molecule is a polypeptide of the order of 28,000 daltons the enzymatic processing of which leads to the coordinated and simultaneous release of different peptide fragments: ACTH, beta- and gamma-lipotropins, beta-endorphin, fragment 16 K and gamma 3-MSH. All these peptides have been identified in human plasma, and pituitary and non-pituitary tumor extracts. Their plasma concentrations vary in a parallel manner, beta-endorphin and a peptide very similar to beta-MSH have been detected in human hypothalamus.
...
PMID:[ACTH, beta-endorphin, lipotropins, and other pro-opiocortin-derived peptides: a new family of hormones (author's transl)]. 628 90

The endocrine status of 106 patients with undifferentiated small cell carcinoma of the lung was evaluated before treatment was begun. Almost one half of the patients had evidence of abnormal control of the secretion of adrenal cortical steroids, manifested by loss of diurnal rhythmicity or dexamethasone suppressibility. Only two had the clinical syndrome of ectopic ACTH secretion. Evidence of inappropriate secretion of vasopressin was found in 38% of the patients, most of whom also had abnormalities of corticosteroid secretory pattern. About one half of the patients had evidence of abnormal glucose tolerance, and many also had a paradoxical rise of plasma growth hormone concentration after glucose administration. The levels of the other hormones studies were normal. The pattern of hormone abnormality observed in these patients appears to be relatively specific for small cell undifferentiated carcinoma, and is different from that observed in other pulmonary tumors. Patients with abnormal control of plasma cortisol had a worse prognosis than those with normal adrenal function, largely because of decreased response rates to chemotherapy. Other endocrine abnormalities were of no prognostic significance.
...
PMID:Endocrine function in small cell undifferentiated carcinoma of the lung. 629 25


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>