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Query: UMLS:C1519176 (
PSA
)
5,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
At the present time, there is no reliable laboratory marker for the diagnosis and prognosis of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC), while about 20% of small tumours detected by modern imaging techniques are benign and the clinical course is difficult to predict with considerable differences for the same stage and same grade. The molecular identification of clear cell RCC cells could satisfy these new requirements in the context of diagnosis of atypical or small renal tumours, allowing a more refined prognostic assessment, which is currently uncertain. Some of the antigens used for molecular diagnosis of clear cell RCC, such as cadherin-6, are present in the normal kidney, while others are newly formed antigens (TuM2PK, MN/CA9, CA12, calpain) or ectopic (PSMA,
PSA
, KLKI, cytokeratin 7 vimentin) or induce abnormal glycosylation (sialyl Lewis'X, galectins) indicating the malignant nature of the cells. The tumour's capacity for progression is related to dysregulations of the cycle (ras, Pax2, Tiam 1, waf/p21), division (tetracyclines, MIB1, PCNA, Nor Ag), apoptosis (bcl2, p53, CD95/Apo1), and the capacities for tissue invasion (proteases), disorganization (cadherin, catenins) or nidation (ICAM-1, CD44). Finally, chromosomal anomalies (mutations, translocations) also occur. MN/CA9, cadherin-6, vimentin,
mucin 1
and DNA content are particularly useful for the diagnosis and/or prognosis of clear cell RCC. These markers can be analysed by extremely sensitive cytometric (flow cytometry, plate cytometry) or molecular methods (RT-PCR, in situ hybridization). These techniques lower the limit of detection of tumour cells in biological products (aspiration cytology, microbiopsy) and eventually in circulating blood. Proteomic and genomic methods (biochips) should considerably accelerate research in this field leading to the development of routine clinical applications.
...
PMID:[Molecular and cytometric analysis of renal cell carcinoma cells. Concepts, techniques and prospects]. 1270 48
The study of mitotic transduction of the signal showed that overexpression of pAkt and reduction in pERK expression would be associated a biological relapse. For tumors T1-3 N0M0 at the high risk of local relapse after prostatectomy, an immediate radiotherapy compared with a differed radiotherapy (at the time of
PSA
relapse), showed a significant reduction in the rate of local relapse and an ameliorated progression free survival. The effectiveness of the docetaxel was confirmed in two phase III randomized clinical trials : TAX-327 with 3 arms compared docetaxel every 21 days, docetaxel every 7 days and mitoxantrone. All arms were prednisone-based. An increase in overall survival,
PSA
progression free survival,
PSA
response rate and a pain reduction were highlighted in the docetaxel arm every 21 days. Docetaxel obtained at the end of this study the marketing authorization in this indication and became the treatment of reference. The SWOG 99-16 study compared the docetaxel estramustine association with the same arm of reference, mitoxantrone and prednisone, with similar results. The addition of estramustine to the docetaxel seems to improve the
PSA
response rate and progression free survival, but with a greater embolic toxicity. The addition of an antiangiogenic agent, the thalidomide, to docetaxel, improves progression free survival and overall survival.
PSA
responses were observed with an inhibitor of the proteasome, the bortezomib, in monotherapy, contrary to the imatinib which in monotherapy didn't have any effectiveness. Studies in association with docetaxel are ongoing. Some biological responses were observed with a vaccine anti
MUC-1
and must be confirmed on a greater series of patients. The docetaxel impact on localized disease is actually evaluated.
...
PMID:[Prostate cancer: update]. 1626 70
We have shown the immunogenicity and safety of synthetic carbohydrate vaccines when conjugated to the carrier keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and given with the adjuvant, QS-21, in patients with biochemically relapsed prostate cancer. To determine whether immune response could be further enhanced with stimulation by multiple antigens, a hexavalent vaccine was prepared using previously determined doses and administered in a Phase II setting to 30 high-risk patients. The hexavalent vaccine included GM2, Globo H, Lewis(y), glycosylated
MUC-1
-32mer and Tn and TF in a clustered formation, conjugated to KLH and mixed with QS-21. Eight vaccinations were administered over 13 months. All 30 patients had significant elevations in antibody titers to at least two of the six antigens; 22 patients had increased reactivity with FACS. These serologic responses were lower than that seen previously in patients treated with the respective monovalent vaccines. The reciprocal median combined IgM and IgG antibody titers with ELISA against MUC1, Tn, TF, globo H and GM2 for these 30 patients were 640, 80, 120, 40 and 0, compared to 1280, 640, 1280, 320 and 160 seen in patients receiving individual monovalent vaccines. This hexavalent vaccine of synthetic "self" antigens broke immunologic tolerance against two or more antigens in all 30 vaccinated patients, was safe, but antibody titers against several of the antigens were lower than those seen in individual monovalent trials. No impact on
PSA
slope was detected. We address the relevance of the multivalent approach for prostate cancer treatment.
...
PMID:A polyvalent vaccine for high-risk prostate patients: "are more antigens better?". 1761 78
Tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) are by definition either weakly immunogenic or functionally nonimmunogenic. Vaccine strategies have been designed to present TAAs to the immune system that may result in far greater activation of T cells than that occurring naturally in the host. These strategies include (1) placing the gene coding for the tumor antigen into poxvirus vectors as a transgene; (2) using diversified prime-and-boost vaccine strategies employing two different types of poxvirus vectors; (3) using T-cell costimulation; and (4) using cytokines, including GM-CSF, as biologic adjuvants. Preclinical studies have been performed comparing the effects on induction of antigen-specific CD8 and CD4 T-cell responses using recombinant poxvirus vectors containing transgenes for a TAA and costimulatory molecules B7-1, ICAM-1, and LFA-3 (designated TRICOM). Antigen-specific T-cell responses were greatest in the group receiving the CEA-TRICOM vaccines and were shown to correlate with survival. We have now completed the first clinical trials with poxvirus vectors containing TRICOM, using the TAAs
PSA
, CEA, and
MUC-1
. In addition, clinical studies combining vaccines with radiation therapy, chemotherapy, and second-line hormone therapy have provided preliminary evidence of prolongation of time to disease progression and antigen cascade postvaccination.
...
PMID:Preclinical and clinical studies of recombinant poxvirus vaccines for carcinoma therapy. 1819 7
We have developed an "off-the-shelf" vector-based vaccine platform containing transgenes for carcinoma-associated antigens and multiple costimulatory molecules (designated TRICOM). Two TRICOM platforms have been evaluated both preclinically and in clinical trials. PROSTVAC consists of rV, rF-
PSA
-TRICOM and is being used in prostate cancer therapy trials. PANVAC consists of rV, rF-CEA-MUC1-TRICOM; the expression of the two pan-carcinoma transgenes CEA and
MUC-1
renders PANVAC vaccination applicable for therapeutic applications for a range of human carcinomas. Many new paradigms have emerged as a consequence of completed and ongoing TRICOM vaccine trials, including (1) clinical evidence of patient benefit may be delayed, because multiple vaccinations may be necessary to induce a sufficient anti-tumor immune response; (2) survival, and not strict adherence to RECIST criteria or time-to-progression, may be the most appropriate trial endpoint when TRICOM vaccines are used as monotherapy; (3) certain patient populations are more likely to benefit from vaccine therapy as compared to other therapeutics; and (4) TRICOM vaccines combined with standard-of-care therapeutics, either concomitantly or sequentially, are feasible because of the limited toxicity of vaccines.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of TRICOM vector therapeutic cancer vaccines. 2259 52
Certain chemotherapeutic regimens trigger cancer cell death while inducing dendritic cell maturation and subsequent immune responses. However, chemotherapy-induced immunogenic cell death (ICD) has thus far been restricted to select agents. In contrast, several chemotherapeutic drugs modulate antitumor immune responses, despite not inducing classic ICD. In addition, in many cases tumor cells do not die after treatment. Here, using docetaxel, one of the most widely used cancer chemotherapeutic agents, as a model, we examined phenotypic and functional consequences of tumor cells that do not die from ICD. Docetaxel treatment of tumor cells did not induce ATP or high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) secretion, or cell death. However, calreticulin (CRT) exposure was observed in all cell lines examined after chemotherapy treatment. Killing by carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA),
MUC-1
, or
PSA
-specific CD8(+) CTLs was significantly enhanced after docetaxel treatment. This killing was associated with increases in components of antigen-processing machinery, and mediated largely by CRT membrane translocation, as determined by functional knockdown of CRT, PERK, or CRT-blocking peptide. A docetaxel-resistant cell line was selected (MDR-1(+), CD133(+)) by continuous exposure to docetaxel. These cells, while resistant to direct cytostatic effects of docetaxel, were not resistant to the chemomodulatory effects that resulted in enhancement of CTL killing. Here, we provide an operational definition of "immunogenic modulation," where exposure of tumor cells to nonlethal/sublethal doses of chemotherapy alters tumor phenotype to render the tumor more sensitive to CTL killing. These observations are distinct and complementary to ICD and highlight a mechanism whereby chemotherapy can be used in combination with immunotherapy.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy-induced immunogenic modulation of tumor cells enhances killing by cytotoxic T lymphocytes and is distinct from immunogenic cell death. 2336 15