Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851341 (infestation)
10,121 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Northeast Thailand has a very high incidence of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC), which is closely linked to infestation by the liver fluke, whereas the etiology of ICC in Japan remains to be clarified. This study compared the clinicopathological features, the expression of p53 and c-erbB-2 proteins, and the proliferative activity of ICC in 19 Thai and 23 Japanese patients with ICC who were treated by hepatic resection. The average age of the Thai patients (55.8 years) was lower than that of the Japanese (61.3 years). All Thai patients presented with symptoms, whereas 8 Japanese patients were asymptomatic. There were no significant differences in preoperative liver function test values. Tumors were less likely to be located in the right lobe in the Japanese (34.8%) than in the Thai patients (63.2%). Peribiliary fibrosis and adenomatous hyperplasia in noncancerous hepatic tissues were much more frequently found in the Thai patients (P = 0.0010; P<0.0001). No significant differences in the expression of p53 protein or c-erbB-2 protein were found between the two series of patients, but proliferative activity, evaluated on the basis of mean MIB1 labeling index, was significantly higher in the Thai patients (P<0.001). The present study suggested a higher proliferative activity of ICC in Thai patients than in Japanese patients.
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PMID:Comparative clinicopathological study of resected intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma in northeast Thailand and Japan. 1098 15

Alterations of the p53 tumor suppressor gene are the most common genetic changes detected in human cancers as well as in papillary and invasive bladder cancer. Several studies have demonstrated an association between HPV infection and urological malignancies. In the present work, the p53 gene status was studied together with the frequency of HPV in 99 cases of Bilharzial bladder cancer [BBC] in Egypt and both were correlated to the clinicopathological features of the patients. SSCP and sequencing were used to screen the p53 gene for mutations at exons 4-10 and IHC was performed to detect protein overexpression. PCR was used for detection and typing of HPV-DNA in tumor samples. p53 mutations were detected in 33.3% of the studied cases whereas protein overexpression was detected in 35.6% of the cases. The highest concordance rate was observed in cases harboring mutations at exon 4 [87.5%]. Bilharzial infestation was obvious in 72.2% of the cases that showed mutations. Exon 8 showed the highest rate of mutation [32%] followed by exons 4 and 5 [22% each]. The commonest mutational event was G:C transversion [15/50] especially at CpG dinucleotides. A mutational hot spot was detected at exon 4, codons 72-73. HPV-DNA was detected in 48.97% of the cases the majority of which [64.6%] were of type 16. Significant correlation was found between p53 mutation and the pathological stage as well as p53 overexpression and tumor grade. Our results demonstrate that the mutational spectrum in BBC is different from that of bladder cancer in Western countries in many aspects and suggest an etiological role of HPV in this type of neoplasm. However, both HPV infection and p53 gene abnormalities may contribute to Bilharzial bladder carcinogenesis in an independent way.
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PMID:Correlation between p53 mutations and HPV in bilharzial bladder cancer. 1467 May 39

Using conventional morphological assessment, squamous change in bladder epithelium has been observed in 73% of bilharzial associated squamous cancers but only 28% of pure transitional cancers. However, more detailed studies of patients with TCC suggest that the latter figure may be an underestimate, since in one series it was reported to be more than 50%. The most significant risk factor for development of squamous carcinoma in the bladder is chronic persistent bacterial cystitis, although in the areas of the world where bilharzia is endemic this infestation also increases the risk of both squamous bladder cancer and chronic bacterial cystitis. Although it is clear that carcinogens are involved as co-factors in transformation from squamous metaplasia to cancer, the fact that in Zimbabwe one author has observed that TCC is more frequent in whites than squamous cancer is in bilharzia infected blacks is evidence that other unidentified risk factors are involved. This is increasing evidence for involvement of HPV subtypes in cervix, oropharynx and lung cancer. As all three of these tumours are associated with squamous metaplasia, there could be a case for investigation of bladder squamous tumours for HPV involvement. This is particularly so given the observation of the "hit and run" type of transient infection in cattle that develop BPV associated tumours and the tenfold difference (30% vs 3%) in frequency of HPV detection in squamous skin tumours developing in immunosuppressed individuals compared with those arising spontaneously. With new technology for cytological screening techniques using dot ELISA and evidence of differences in TP53 mutations that support the involvement of nitrous oxide, it is clear that there is more to learn from study of this tumour type that may be of general interest in understanding the clonal development of cancer.
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PMID:Squamous change in bladder cancer and its relevance to understanding clonal evolution in development of bladder cancer. 1528 15