Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The prognosis of colon cancer, after curative resection, is mainly related to the outcome of metastases, and especially of liver metastases. It is generally accepted that adjuvant medical therapy is important in order to prevent the incidence of metastatic recurrences. The aim of the present review is to analyse the conclusions of the main recent randomized trials assessing the comparative value of different adjuvant protocols. The results obtained using either systemic infusion, the classical one, or intraportal infusion, which is mainly designed to prevent liver metastases, are reported. On the basis of the review, we can conclude that: adjuvant chemotherapy using combined drugs (MF, MOF) did not prove to be more active than 5-FU alone. The beneficial action of a combined 5-FU + levamisole regimen has been clearly demonstrated for patients with a Dukes C tumour. According to a unique and limited trial, intraportal adjuvant therapy has been shown to be effective for patients with Dukes B tumours, but this remains to be confirmed. On the basis of the present data, new adjuvant programs using combined chemotherapeutic and immunotherapeutic coupounds, and combined systemic and loco-regional infusion, could be developed.
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PMID:[Prevention of hepatic metastases in radically operated colonic cancers]. 206 93

In three patients with colon cancer and liver metastases who had received intra-arterial chemo-infusion of fluorouracil (5FU) and mitomycin C and/or cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (CDDP), intrahepatic portal vein thrombosis (PVT) was incidentally demonstrated by computerized tomography (CT) 6, 1 and 7 months respectively after the cessation of administration of anti-cancer agents. One patient developed complete PVT in the whole liver as shown by follow-up CT 6 months after a diagnosis of pre-existing sclerosing cholangitis, and died from rupture of oesophageal varices. In the remaining two patients, PVT was found incidentally by follow-up CT in the right portal vein (Case 2) and the right anterior portal vein (Case 3) respectively; it spontaneously recanalized in Case 2 and was still present in Case 3 2 months later. PVT seems to be one of the complications of hepatic arterial chemo-infusion and its possibility must be borne in mind in such patients, even though the exact interval between the arterial chemo-infusion and occurrence of PVT could not be determined.
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PMID:Portal vein obstruction complicating intra-arterial chemo-infusion for hepatic metastases. 212 46

Cell surface receptors for laminin may play an important role in tumor migration and metastasis. To evaluate laminin receptor/laminin-binding protein expression in human colon carcinoma, surgical specimens of primary colon cancers and liver metastases were examined by blot hybridization of total RNA with a complementary DNA clone which encodes a Mr 32,000 human laminin-binding protein. The mRNA level of the laminin-binding protein was higher in primary colon carcinoma than in adjacent normal colonic epithelium in 20 of 21 cases. In all 6 cases of colon cancer liver metastases, the laminin-binding protein mRNA level was more than 3-fold greater in tumor than in adjacent normal liver tissue. The tumor/normal ratio of this laminin-binding protein mRNA expression in primary colon cancer has significant correlation with Dukes' classification (P less than 0.001). Our results suggest that mRNA expression of the laminin-binding protein may be a marker of human colorectal cancer progression and biological aggressiveness.
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PMID:Expression of a Mr 32,000 laminin-binding protein messenger RNA in human colon carcinoma correlates with disease progression. 214 Dec 94

A total of 213 patients with carcinoma of the colon and rectum were examined to detect liver metastases. The study compared preoperative ultrasonography and inspection and palpation of the liver during surgery with intraoperative ultrasonography. Preoperative ultrasonography, inspection and palpation identified 238 metastases in 42 patients. Intraoperative ultrasonography detected 116 previously unrecognized metastatic tumours during 40 surgical procedures (P less than 0.01). High resolution intraoperative ultrasonography is safe and more accurate than preoperative imaging and surgical exploratory methods. The examination is simple to perform and success appears to be related to careful attention to detail.
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PMID:Intraoperative ultrasonography and the detection of liver metastases in patients with colorectal cancer. 220 93

This study presents a review of 519 of 553 unselected patients with carcinoma of the caecum presenting in the Plymouth Health District between 1975 and 1987. A large proportion of the patients were elderly and the median age increased throughout the study period to 76 years. One third of cases presented as an emergency and a small number was discovered at autopsy. Bowel obstruction accounted for over half the emergencies and chronic anaemia for half the elective cases. At presentation many tumours were advanced and only 5% were Dukes' A. One quarter of patients had synchronous tumours. Resection was performed in most cases, and this was attempted even in the presence of local invasion and liver metastases. Morbidity following resection was low and only six anastomotic leaks were clinically apparent. The mortality rate following resection was 2.6% and was higher for emergency procedures. The age-adjusted 5-year survival rate was 37% and rose to 64% for those undergoing 'curative' surgery. These results suggest that future improvements in the management of right colon cancer may lie with early referral and diagnosis. This study further highlights the importance of good perioperative care in the increasingly elderly patient.
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PMID:Carcinoma of the caecum. 235 83

The role of cytokines as primary or adjuvant antineoplastic agents has been well established. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) and the interferons have, particularly, proven to be effective antitumor agents when given alone, and seem to act synergistically on the eradication of metastases from immunogenic tumors. Active specific immunotherapy, in the form of viral oncolysates, has also shown effectiveness in cancer therapy. Bearing this in mind, we decided to combine these agents in an adjuvant triple regimen and compare their effectiveness to other treatments in terms of tumor burden and survival in a murine colon cancer hepatic metastases model. BALB/c mice were injected with CC-36, a weakly immunogenic murine colon adenocarcinoma, intrasplenically, to produce artificial liver metastases. The animals were divided into one control group and seven treatment groups receiving either vaccinia colon oncolysate (VCO), IL-2, interferon-alpha (IFN alpha) alone, or combinations of these agents. Half the animals were followed for survival and the other half were sacrificed at the end of the experiment for quantification of tumor burden. The blood of the sacrificed animals was utilized in a series of immunological tests in order to demonstrate the cytolytic potential of the peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) in each treatment group, as well as to characterize phenotypically the cells acting as effectors. The triple-adjuvant regimen group was by far the most effective treatment group, demonstrating 100% survival and a significant reduction in tumor burden when compared to other groups. Furthermore, the PBL from the animals in this group showed 69.4% lysis of the CC-36 target cells in vitro. These effector lymphocytes were characterized as ASMG1-/Lyt2.2+ cytolytic lymphocytes. We conclude that these lymphocytes were stimulated by the administration of VCO and further augmented by the immunomodulation of the cytokines given in the triple regimen, and that such a regimen might prove beneficial in the treatment of established hepatic metastases from weakly immunogenic tumors.
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PMID:Active specific immunotherapy with vaccinia colon oncolysate enhances the immunomodulatory and antitumor effects of interleukin-2 and interferon alpha in a murine hepatic metastasis model. 237 48

The liver is the most frequent site of metastases from colon cancer. To improve our knowledge of liver metastases and to develop new adjuvant therapies, a good animal model is necessary. The aims of this study were to obtain a model of liver metastases with intraportal injection of colon adrenocarcinoma cell aggregates (DHDK12 cell line) and to study the effect of various factors, i.e., sex, liver regeneration and immunosuppression, on the development of liver metastasis. Cell aggregates were injected into the portal vein of 59 syngenic male and female BD IX rats following randomization into three groups. Group 1, (control 12 males and 10 females) received only cell aggregates; group 2 (12 males and 10 females) underwent a 70% hepatectomy before cell injection; group 3 (15 males and 10 females) received cyclosporin A injections at a dose of 10 mg/kg per day for 28 days following cell injection. Autopsy was performed at 10 weeks. Liver metastases were more frequent in the male rats in group 3 than in those in group 1 (80% vs. 30%, p less than 0.04). The rate of liver metastases in females was not increased by immunosuppression (22.2% vs. 12.5%, N.S.). Liver resection (group 2) did not significantly modify the incidence of liver metastasis. No female had liver metastases in this group. This relatively simple model rapidly produces liver metastasis with a high yield, but only in male rats. Besides sexual factors, immunosuppression also increased the rate of experimental liver metastasis, while liver regeneration failed to do so.
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PMID:Experimental colorectal liver metastases. Influence of sex, immunological status and liver regeneration. 239 66

Several preclinical and clinical studies have documented that dose or dose intensity of chemotherapeutic agents are important factors for response of patients' tumors. This finding has prompted empiric trials of certain chemotherapeutic agents in high-dose or regional administration treatment regimens. The present study was performed to identify agents that would be particularly good candidates for high-dose or regional administration regimens against particular types of tumors. Using a human tumor cloning technique, we constructed dose in vitro response lines for ten different chemotherapeutic agents against seven different histologic types of malignancies. Slopes of the lines indicated the agents with the greatest increases of in vitro response per increment in dose of the agent. Tumors against which the agents gave the steepest dose response lines included lymphoma, head and neck cancer, ovarian cancer, and small-cell lung cancer, while the dose response lines for non-small-cell lung cancer, breast cancer, and colon cancer were quite flat. Suggestions for clinical trials based on these findings include the use of high-dose melphalan for patients with lymphoma, head and neck, and ovarian cancer; the use of mitoxantrone in high-dose regimens for patients with breast cancer; high-dose cisplatin regimens for patients with small-cell lung cancer; high-dose bleomycin regimens for patients with non-small-cell lung and head and neck cancer; and regional perfusion of liver metastases from colorectal cancer with cisplatin. Prospective testing of high-dose or regional administration regimens suggested by this new model should indicate its use for prediction of the best agent to use in high-dose regimens against a particular tumor type.
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PMID:Use of in vitro dose response effects to select antineoplastics for high-dose or regional administration regimens. 243 Nov 10

In 98 patients affected by colorectal cancer (43 patients with colon cancer, 55 patients with rectosigmoid cancer) the specificity of some tumor markers (CEA, GICA, TPA, alpha-FP, FpA, gamma-GT) has been tested in evidencing the coexistence of liver metastases and the site of the primary tumor, i.e. the rectosigmoid region (rectum + 15 cm of the adjacent sigmoid colon) vs the rest of the colon. Liver metastases, present in 19 patients with colon cancer and in 24 with recto-sigmoid cancer, were previously ascertained by various instrumental investigations. Unlike previous studies which indicated CEA or alpha-FP as the most reliable markers to suggest the coexistence of liver metastases in such patients, the reported results allow the following sequence, in decreasing order of sensitivity, to be proposed: gamma-GT; FpA; CEA and GICA to a similar degree; TPA, which increases only when liver metastases from colon cancer are present; lastly, alpha-FP, which rises only in very few cases of massive hepatic involvement.
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PMID:Specificity of tumor markers (CEA, GICA, TPA, alpha-FP, FpA, gamma-GT) for the diagnosis of hepatic metastases from large bowel cancers. 247 62

Thirteen patients with a diagnosis of primary colorectal tumour and 68 patients previously operated for colon cancer underwent an immunoscintigraphy carried out with monoclonal antibodies anti-CEA F(ab')2, labelled with 131I or 111In. These studies led to the detection of all primary tumours and of most of their associated lesions (7/8). In this group 15 neoplastic deposits previously undetected were demonstrated, allowing an improvement in the patient staging before the operation. In the group of the 68 operated patients, immunoscintigraphy succeeded in imaging 96 out of 121 known lesions: the best outcomes were obtained for abdominal and pelvic recurrences as well as for lymph nodes lesions. The lowest levels of sensitivity were observed for liver metastases. An enhancement of the immunoscintigraphy sensitivity was obtained when the radiopharmaceutical was injected intraperitoneally. In 50 patients, this alternative administration route was successful in detecting 91/107 cancer deposits and, in particular, liver metastases were found out in 36/42 cases.
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PMID:Immunoscintigraphy of primary and metastatic colorectal cancers with radiolabelled monoclonal antibodies anti-CEA. 248 18


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