Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1140680 (ovarian cancer)
28,141 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a case of sarcomatoid carcinoma of the ureter in a 60-year-old woman who presented at our hospital with right flank pain. She had undergone total ovariectomy and radiation therapy for ovarian cancer at the age of 40 years. A diagnosis of ureteral tumor (cTsN0M0) led to radical right nephroureterectomy and partial cystectomy. Microscopic examination showed a tumor that contained areas of both sarcoma and transitional cell carcinoma. The carcinomatous tissues were blended into the sarcomatous areas and there was a transitional zone between the 2 components. Immunohistochemical examination showed that the spindle cells were positive for cytokeratin, so the final diagnosis was sarcomatoid carcinoma of the ureter. The patient has remained well without any evidence of recurrence for 5 months since the operation. There is no effective adjunctive therapy, so constant careful monitoring will be necessary. Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the ureter is a rare tumor and this is only the sixth case reported in Japan.
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PMID:Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the ureter: a case report. 947 96

The expression of Bfl-1 gene, a novel Bcl-2 related gene, was determined by Northern blot analysis using a radiolabeled cDNA specific for Bfl-1 gene in 82 surgically resected tissue specimens of 28 gastric cancers, 15 colon cancers, nine breast cancers, eight bone and soft tissue sarcomas, five ovarian cancers, nine colon adenomas and eight gastric adenomas. A high rate of expression was observed in gastric and colon cancer, at 86 and 93%, respectively. In breast cancer, bone and soft tissue sarcoma and ovarian cancer, the expression rate was 33, 25 and 40%, respectively. In stomach cancer, the expression rate of Bfl-1 gene in metastatic lymph nodes was 82%, which was higher than 50% of the primary sites (p < 0.02). The intensity of RNA bands of the gastric cancer specimens was compared according to the stage, demonstrating that there was no difference in the expression levels of Bfl-1 gene between the stages in both primary sites and metastatic lymph nodes. Bfl-1 gene was expressed in three (33%) out of nine adenomas of the colon, while it was not detected in all eight gastric adenomas, We also examined the RNA expression of Bfl-1 gene in 22 human cancer cell lines consisting of five stomach cancer, four squamous cell carcinoma, three lung cancer, three cervical cancer, two colon cancer, two brain cancer, two leukemia and one osteosarcoma cell lines. Bfl-1 gene band was detected in one (5%) cervical cancer cell line, SiHa. The results of cancer tissue specimens indicate that Bfl-1 gene may play an important role in carcinogenesis of human cancers and may be involved in a relatively early phase of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence in colon cancer development. However, the mechanism responsible for the very low rate of expression in established cell lines is not clearly understood and further investigation is necessary to clarify the mechanism involved.
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PMID:Expression of a novel Bcl-2 related gene, Bfl-1, in various human cancers and cancer cell lines. 949 79

Epidemiologic evidence on the relationship between chemical pesticides and cancer is reviewed. In animal studies, many pesticides are carcinogenic, (e.g., organochlorines, creosote, and sulfallate) while others (notably, the organochlorines DDT, chlordane, and lindane) are tumor promoters. Some contaminants in commercial pesticide formulations also may pose a carcinogenic risk. In humans, arsenic compounds and insecticides used occupationally have been classified as carcinogens by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Human data, however, are limited by the small number of studies that evaluate individual pesticides. Epidemiologic studies, although sometimes contradictory, have linked phenoxy acid herbicides or contaminants in them with soft tissue sarcoma (STS) and malignant lymphoma; organochlorine insecticides are linked with STS, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), leukemia, and, less consistently, with cancers of the lung and breast; organophosphorous compounds are linked with NHL and leukemia; and triazine herbicides with ovarian cancer. Few, if any, of these associations can be considered established and causal. Hence, further epidemiologic studies are needed with detailed exposure assessment for individual pesticides, taking into consideration work practices, use of protective equipment, and other measures to reduce risk.
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PMID:Pesticides and cancer. 949 3

We have established ten transplantable human soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) xenografts grown as subcutaneous tumours in the nude mouse. Nine xenografts originated from patients that needed chemotherapy in the course of their disease. The xenografts were tested for their sensitivity to maximum tolerated doses of five anti-cancer agents. Growth of treated tumours was expressed as a percentage of control tumour growth and a growth inhibition > 75% was measured for doxorubicin in 20% of the STS xenografts, for cyclophosphamide in 30%, for ifosfamide in 20%, for vincristine in 20%, whereas etoposide was not effective in the STS xenografts. In three out of ten STS xenografts MDR1 mRNA was detectable, but this was not related to the resistance against doxorubicin, vincristine or etoposide. Topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA expression levels did not reflect sensitivity to doxorubicin or etoposide. In all STS tissues, however, these levels were lower than topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA in a drug-sensitive human ovarian cancer xenograft. Glutathione concentrations and the activities of glutathione S-transferase, glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase were not related to resistance against the alkylating agents or doxorubicin. Of interest, in all STS tissues, glutathione S-transferase pi was the predominant isoenzyme present. In conclusion, chemosensitivity of the STS xenografts reflects clinical response rates in phase II trials on the same compounds in adult STS patients. Relatively low levels of topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA may partly account for intrinsic resistance against, for example, doxorubicin. Additional factors must contribute to moderate responsiveness to alkylating agents.
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PMID:Characterization of human soft-tissue sarcoma xenografts for use in secondary drug screening. 986 68

Ifosfamide is an alkylating antineoplastic agent with documented activity against a variety of solid tumor types, most notably lung cancer, testicular cancer, and sarcoma. Ifosfamide has been included in various drug combination protocols, usually on an empirical basis. To gather more insight into the mechanisms that underlie these drug interactions and to develop guidelines for further improvement of clinical combination protocols, we performed a broad preclinical evaluation program of ifosfamide-based combination regimens using isobologram analysis of drug interactions. In established cisplatin-sensitive and cisplatin-refractory ovarian carcinoma cell lines, a schedule-dependent drug interaction between paclitaxel and activated hydroperoxy-ifosfamide (4-OOH-IF) could be demonstrated. When both drugs were given for 2 hours, simultaneous exposure or the sequence of paclitaxel followed by 4-OOH-IF were additive or synergistic. In contrast, application of 4-OOH-IF before paclitaxel resulted in pronounced antagonism. Based on the sequence-dependent synergistic interactions a phase I trial was initiated with paclitaxel given on day 1 and ifosfamide given on days 2 to 5 in patients with cisplatin-refractory ovarian cancer. Four dose levels were evaluated in 18 patients. The maximum tolerated dose was paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 on day 1 and ifosfamide 2,000 mg/m2 on days 2 to 5, with central nervous system toxicity and nephrotoxicity being dose-limiting. The recommended dose for further evaluation of this combination was paclitaxel 175 mg/m2 on day 1 and ifosfamide 1,500 mg/m2 on days 2 to 5. Although all patients were heavily pretreated with multiple agents, nine of 18 patients achieved an objective response. Ifosfamide also has been shown to reduce cellular glutathione content; thus, a series of experiments evaluated the ability of activated cyclophosphamide or ifosfamide to deplete cellular glutathione in vitro. It was demonstrated that glutathione depletion is dose- and time-dependent, with 4-OOH-IF leading to a more pronounced suppression of cellular glutathione compared with 4-OOH-Cy. The decrease in cellular glutathione content was maximal at 2 hours after drug treatment; however, cellular glutathione levels returned to normal within 24 hours. When 4-OOH-IF was combined in vitro with cisplatin, schedule-dependent interactions again became obvious. The highest antitumor activity was seen when both drugs were given concurrently; sequential application with 4-OOH-IF given before cisplatin resulted in antagonism. Since adequate glutathione levels are necessary for multidrug resistance protein (MRP) function, glutathione depletion might lead to reversal of MRP-mediated drug resistance. Preliminary data showed that 4-OOH-IF significantly decreases glutathione concentrations in MRP-expressing human HT1080/DR4 sarcoma cells, leading to maximum steady-state reduction after a 90-min exposure to 4-OOH-IF. Taken together the data reported here demonstrate that in vitro ifosfamide may potentiate the antitumor activity of a variety of cytotoxic agents and therefore merits further clinical evaluation in drug combinations (eg, taxanes, anthracyclines).
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PMID:Ifosfamide-based drug combinations: preclinical evaluation of drug interactions and translation into the clinic. 1069 38

Krukenberg tumor clinically mimics primary ovarian cancer. We report a series of 15 cases of Krukenberg tumor. The patients' age range from 13 to 71 years. Most ovarian tumors (14/15) were bilateral. A primary digestive tumor was diagnosed pre-operatively in 3 cases, per-operatively in 3 cases and post-operatively in 4 cases. No primary tumor was identified in the 5 other cases. Histological diagnosis of Krukenberg tumor is usually easy either on paraffin or frozen sections. Mucin stains are helpful. Two main histological types were found in our series : the classic form with sarcoma-like storiform tumoral stroma and an alternative cellular-acellular pattern. Mucinous carcinoid was microscopically challenged in two cases. Most patients died within 2 years (median survival 14 months). Nor surgery, neither chemotherapy is efficient but bilateral oophorectomy should be proposed in post-menopausal women with gastric linitis removed surgically.
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PMID:Krukenberg tumor: a clinico-pathological study of 15 cases. 1089 13

It has been unequivocally demonstrated that hyperthermia (40-44 degrees C) has an potentiating effect on radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Technical improvements have facilitated the application of both local and whole-body hyperthermia, and have thus made this form of treatment available to large numbers of patients. Randomized phase III studies performed in patients with breast cancer, malignant melanoma and cervical cancer have convincingly confirmed the increased efficacy of the combination of radiotherapy with local or regional hyperthermia in comparison with radiotherapy alone. The effectiveness of other procedures such as the combination of radio- and chemotherapy with regional hyperthermia, regional thermochemotherapy and whole-body hyperthermia has so far been investigated mainly in phase II studies focusing on head and neck cancer, cervical and ovarian cancer, sarcoma, malignant germ cell tumors, and rectal carcinoma. However, the actual place of hyperthermia as a permanent element in a multimodal therapeutic concept has yet to be shown in prospective phase III studies.
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PMID:[Addition of hyperthermia. Heat potentiates cancer therapy]. 1146 93

Gemcitabine (2',2'-difluorodeoxycytidine) is a nucleoside analog with antitumor activity against a variety of malignancies. The critical enzyme cytidine kinase is saturated at plasma concentrations achieved after a 30-min infusion at conventional doses. Prolonged infusion time may yield higher intracellular dFdCTP concentrations. A phase I study was designed to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of gemcitabine, given by infusion for 3 h, in heavily pretreated patients. Twenty-seven patients (13 head and neck cancer, seven sarcoma, three esophageal cancer, three non-small-cell lung cancer and one ovarian cancer) were enrolled. Twenty patients were defined as refractory at first- or second-line chemotherapy. Four different entry dose levels (300, 400, 450 and 500 mg/m(2)) were evaluated for gemcitabine administered on days 1, 8 and 15 of a 28-day cycle. The MTD was defined as 450 mg/m(2), with granulocytopenia, thrombocytopenia and asthenia being dose limiting. The maximum grade III/IV patient toxicities for hemoglobin, leukocytes, neutrophils and platelets for all doses were 7, 19, 19 and 11%, respectively. Non-hematological toxicities included asthenia, nausea/vomiting and diarrhea. Thus, gemcitabine administered at a fixed 3-h infusion was well tolerated up to 450 mg/m(2) in heavily pretreated patients. Myelosupression and asthenia were dose-limiting toxicities.
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PMID:Phase I trial of weekly gemcitabine at 3-h infusion in refractory, heavily pretreated advanced solid tumors. 1159 51

Ecteinascidin-743 (ET-743), a tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from the Caribbean tunicate, Ecteinascidia turbinata, is under development by PharmaMar (the pharmaceutical subsidiary of Zeltia), the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and Ortho Biotech, as a potential treatment for several tumor types including breast cancer, lung cancer, ovarian cancer and melanoma. It appears to function by DNA minor groove alkylation, which induces topoisomerase I-mediated protein-linked DNA strand breakage [322446]. ET-743 is an analog of ET-729 [169825]. As of February 1999, it was in phase II trials [326363], [326268], [375811] and, in August 2001, PharmaMar expected phase II trials for breast, ovarian and non-small cell lung cancer to be completed by August 2002 [423408]. In June 2001, the EMEA awarded ET-743 Orphan Drug status for the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma [412446]. The orphan medicinal product designation is designed to expedite the registration of pharmaceuticals for life-threatening or debilitating conditions with low prevalence (< 5 per 10,000 in the EU), for which no satisfactory treatment exists. The designation offers the sponsor several incentives, such as centralized procedure review of the Marketing Authorization Application and, upon approval, ten-year marketing exclusivity throughout Europe for the therapeutic indication for which it was granted. PharmaMar is also collaborating with the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC); PharmaMar has obtained the worldwide rights to ET-743, amongst other ecteinascidins, from the University of Illinois [177268]. In August 2001, Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein predicted total sales, for all ET-743's indications, of $1 million in 2002, rising through $1106 million in 2007 to $2725 million in 2011 [423408].
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PMID:ET-743 (PharmaMar/NCI/Ortho Biotech). 1176 68

There is increasing interest in the exploitation of molecular addresses for the targeting of tumor imaging or therapeutic agents. A recent study demonstrated anticancer activity in human xenografts of doxorubicin (DOX)-peptide conjugates targeted to the tumor vascular endothelium, among them DOX coupled to the cyclic pentapeptide CNGRC [Science 279 (1998) 377]. In order to learn more about the mechanism of action of this type of DOX-peptide conjugates, we have studied the interaction of DOX-CNGRC with primary human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and tumor cells under defined in vitro conditions. We used a DOX conjugate, in which the cyclic CNGRC peptide, for which an in vivo endothelial address has recently been identified as aminopeptidase N (APN)/CD13, has been coupled via a hydrolysable spacer to the C-14 anthracycline-side chain. First we determined that the t(1/2) of DOX-CNGRC conjugate in human blood was 442 min (at 37 degrees ) allowing sufficient time for endothelial targeting when administered i.v. When cultured cells were exposed for 30 min to DOX-CNGRC a more cytoplasmic localization of fluorescent drug was seen when compared to DOX exposure and intracellular DOX-CNGRC was identified after extraction from the cells. This revealed differences in the cellular uptake process of the conjugate compared to DOX. The antiproliferative effect of DOX-CNGRC was determined by 30 min exposure in medium with a high protein content in order to mimick the in vivo targeting situation. In this medium, the IC(50) was 1.1 microM for highly CD13 expressing HT-1080, 1.45 microM for CD13 negative SK-UT-1 sarcoma cells and 6.5 microM for CD13 positive HUVEC. The IC(50) of DOX for these cells were 1.0, 2.0 and 7.3 microM, respectively. Although DOX-CNGRC inhibited the peptidase activity of CD13 up to 50%, our data do not favor an important role for the enzyme inhibition in the cytotoxic effect of the conjugate. The antitumor activity was tested in nude mice bearing human ovarian cancer xenografts (OVCAR-3). A weekly i.v. administration (3mg/kg DOX-equivalent, 3x) showed a minor (40%) growth delay, which does not indicate efficacy better than that expected for free DOX. In conclusion, this study indicates that the antiproliferative and anti-angiogenic effects of DOX-CNGRC as reported before, are likely caused by the cytostatic effects of intracellularly released parent drug DOX, independent of CD13 expression/activity. More research is needed to identify the optimal specific chemical configuration of DOX-peptide conjugates for in vivo targeting and receptor-mediated cellular uptake.
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PMID:A doxorubicin-CNGRC-peptide conjugate with prodrug properties. 1191 42


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