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Query: UMLS:C1522084 (
Osteosarcoma
)
2,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Osteosarcoma
is the most common malignant bone neoplasia occurring in young patients in the first two decades of life, and represents 20% of all primitive malignant bone tumours. At present, treatment of metastatic osteosarcoma is unsatisfactory. High-dose chemotherapy followed by CD34+ leukapheresis rescue may improve these poor results. Neoplastic cells contaminating the apheresis may, however, contribute to relapse. To identify markers suitable for detecting osteosarcoma cells in aphereses we analysed the expression of bone-specific genes (Bone Sialoprotein (BSP) and Osteocalcin) and oncogenes (Met and ErbB2) in 22 patients with metastatic osteosarcoma and six healthy stem cell donors. The expression of these genes in aphereses of patients affected by metastatic osteosarcoma was assessed by RT-PCR and Southern blot analysis. Met and Osteocalcin proved to be not useful markers since they are positive in aphereses of both patients with metastatic osteosarcoma and healthy stem cell donors. On the contrary, BSP was expressed at significant levels in 85% of patients. Moreover, 18% of patients showed a strong and significantly positive (seven to 16 times higher than healthy stem cell donors) ErbB2 expression. In all positive cases, neoplastic tissue also expressed ErbB2. Our data show that ErbB2 can be a useful marker for tumour contamination in aphereses of patients affected by ErbB2-expressing osteosarcomas and that analysis of Bone Sialoprotein expression can be an alternative useful marker.
Br J
Cancer
2003 Feb 10
PMID:ErbB2 and bone sialoprotein as markers for metastatic osteosarcoma cells. 1256 82
Osteosarcoma
by nature shows aggressive pulmonary metastasis; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. We previously showed that N-cadherin and cadherin-11 (OB-cadherin), which are highly expressed in normal osteoblasts, are anomalously expressed in human osteosarcoma (Kashima et al., Am J Pathol 1999;155:1549-55). In the present study, we examined the role of cadherins in osteosarcoma metastasis using the mouse osteosarcoma cell line Dunn and its highly metastatic subline LM8. Oligonucleotide array and RT-PCR analyses demonstrated that Dunn and LM8 cells did not express appreciable levels of several members of the cadherin family, and Western blot analysis confirmed that Dunn and LM8 cells did not express P-cadherin, E-cadherin, N-cadherin or cadherin-11 protein. We therefore investigated the functional consequences of cadherin overexpression on cell migration and in vivo metastatic potential of LM8 cells. Several LM8 clones were isolated which expressed exogenous N-cadherin and cadherin-11 localized to the cell membrane and able to bind to beta-catenin. Overexpression of N-cadherin or cadherin-11 in LM8 cells did not affect cell proliferation but caused an inhibitory effect on cell migration in vitro. In vivo analysis showed that N-cadherin- and cadherin-11-overexpressing cells exhibited a marked reduction in their ability to form pulmonary metastases, with significant decreases in lung weight and the number and weight of metastatic lesions, as well as the size and weight of primary lesions at the s.c.-inoculated site. These observations demonstrate that disruption of N-cadherin- and cadherin-11-mediated cell-cell adhesion is critical in the pulmonary metastasis of osteosarcoma.
Int J
Cancer
2003 Mar 20
PMID:Overexpression of cadherins suppresses pulmonary metastasis of osteosarcoma in vivo. 1256 68
Osteosarcoma
, one of the most frequent secondary
malignancies
after the treatment of young patients with
cancer
, has only very rarely been observed in association with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). We report four patients who were identified by searching the database of the Cooperative
Osteosarcoma
Study Group (COSS) for patients whose osteosarcoma arose following HSCT. Transplant indications had been acute lymphoblastic leukemia (3). and sickle cell disease (1). and the stem cell source was bone marrow in all cases (three allogeneic, one syngeneic). All four had received chemotherapy with alkylators as part of their conditioning regimen and/or first line therapy. The conditioning regimen included total body irradiation in three patients. The osteosarcomas arose at the age (adolescence) and sites (around the knee) typical for the disease. All four patients received chemotherapy as part of multimodal osteosarcoma treatment, and all four are currently alive, three in continuous remission at 5 7/12, 2 11/12, and 0 6/12 years and one with relapsed osteosarcoma at 4 1/12 years. One of the osteosarcoma-free survivors suffered a third
malignancy
, myelodysplastic syndrome.
Osteosarcoma
should be included among the secondary
malignancies
that can arise following HSCT. Multi-modal therapy according to guidelines for de novo osteosarcoma can lead to long-term survival in selected patients.
...
PMID:Osteosarcoma after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. A report of four cases from the Cooperative Osteosarcoma Study Group (COSS). 1263 26
Osteosarcoma
is a
malignant neoplasm
of bone usually affecting long bones. Skull involvement is rare. Primary cranial involvement accounts for less than 3% of all skull neoplasms. We report the imaging findings of a case of osteosarcoma of the frontal bone.
...
PMID:[Frontal osteosarcoma: a case report]. 1271 90
Osteosarcoma
is a bone-forming
cancer
predominantly found in children and adolescents more often than in adults.
Osteosarcoma
of the gnathic apparatus is relatively rare in the young population, and this condition becomes a concern of clinical dentists for predominantly the middle-aged and aging patient groups. Osteosarcomas are invaded by lymphocytes, which exhibit signs of activation. The immune processes that are engaged within the malignant bone matrix involve the production of cytokines, which regulate the process of apoptotic programmed cell death. This paper discusses the mechanisms by which apoptosis of osteosarcoma cells is modulated by the neuroendocrine-immune system, and potential physiological implications.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine-immune surveillance of osteosarcoma: emerging hypothesis. 1276 91
The overall incidence of osteosarcoma is low. However, the occurrence of osteosarcoma in a setting of multiple primary tumours is not infrequent, although population-based incidence numbers are unknown. The occurrence of osteosarcoma and other
malignancies
is frequently related to treatment, and can also be the result of genetic predisposition as in patients with retinoblastoma, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, Werner syndrome and Rothmund-Thomson syndrome. The aim of our study is to establish the incidence of osteosarcoma associated with other
malignancies
in a populationwide study and to find out if these osteosarcomas have a specific subtype, that could draw attention to a genetic predisposition to
malignancy
. A list of all patients registered in the Dutch National Pathology Register, named PALGA, with a diagnosis of osteosarcoma between 1975 and May 2000 was retrieved. All patients with another
malignancy
besides osteosarcoma were selected. All patients registered in the same period with a tonsillectomy served as a control for the occurrence of
malignancy
in a normal population. In a second step, only osteosarcoma patients with a history of retinoblastoma or a
malignancy
before the age of 46 years, since these are most probable to have a hereditary
cancer
syndrome, were retained for further analysis. The osteosarcomas were subtyped as common, chondroblastic, fibroblastic, teleangiectatic, anaplastic, osteoclast-rich or small cell. As a control for osteosarcoma subtypes the data of 570 patients entered in two studies from the European
Osteosarcoma
Intergroup (EORTC/MRC) were used. Of all 938 patients registered with the diagnosis of osteosarcoma, 66 had a history of multiple primary tumours. Four patients had a surface osteosarcoma, three an extraskeletal osteosarcoma and 59 had intramedullar high-grade osteosarcoma. Of this last group, one patient was known with Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, one had retinoblastoma and 30 had their
malignancies
before the age of 46. Of these 32 patients, 17 had osteosarcoma of the long bones. Especially women seem to be more susceptible for the development of multiple primaries. In nine patients, the histological subtype could be assessed by revision of available histological slides. All of these patients had an osteosarcoma subtype other than common as opposed to 29% in the control group of the European
Osteosarcoma
Intergroup. It is concluded that although the incidence of osteosarcoma is low, the occurrence of another
malignancy
in osteosarcoma patients is higher than in the normal population. Specifically, osteosarcoma patients have a relative risk of 2.4 (95% confidence interval 1.88-3.07) to develop another
malignancy
. A noncommon subtype of osteosarcoma should draw attention to a possible genetic predisposition of the patient involved.
...
PMID:Multiple primary malignancies in osteosarcoma patients. Incidence and predictive value of osteosarcoma subtype for cancer syndromes related with osteosarcoma. 1289 82
Osteosarcoma
(OS) is a highly malignant bone neoplasm of children and young adults. It is characterized by chaotic karyotypes with complex marker chromosomes. We applied a combination of molecular cytogenetic techniques including comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), spectral karyotyping (SKY), and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to decipher the chromosomal complexity in a panel of 25 tumors. Combined SKY and G-banding analysis identified several novel recurrent breakpoint clusters and 9 nonrecurrent reciprocal translocations. CGH identified several recurrent chromosomal losses including 2q, 3p, 9, 10p, 12q, 13q, 14q, 15q, 16, 17p, and 18q, gains including Xp, Xq, 5q, 6p, 8q, 17p, and 20q, and high-level chromosomal amplifications at Xp11.2, 1q21-q22, 4p11, 4q12, 5p15, 6p12.1, 8q13, 8q23, 10q11, 10q22, 11q13, 11q23, 12q13-q14, 13q21-q34, 16q22, 17p11.2, 17q21-q22, 18q22, 20p11.2, and 20q12. Frequent amplification and rearrangement involving chromosomal bands at 6p12-p21 and 17p11.2 were found in 28% and 32% of cases, respectively. In an attempt to identify the genes involved in these amplicons, we used three nonoverlapping BAC clones contained within each amplicon as probes for FISH analysis, leading to a more detailed characterization and quantification of the 6p and 17p amplicons.
Genes Chromosomes
Cancer
2004 Jan
PMID:Frequent amplification and rearrangement of chromosomal bands 6p12-p21 and 17p11.2 in osteosarcoma. 1460 37
The Wingless-type (Wnt) family of proteins and its coreceptor LRP5 have recently been implicated in human skeletal development. Wnt pathway modulates cell fate and cell proliferation during embryonic development and carcinogenesis through activation of receptor-mediated signaling.
Osteosarcoma
(OS) is a bone-forming tumor of mesenchymal origin whose growth control has been linked to autocrine or paracrine stimulation by several growth factor families. We examined 4 OS cell lines for WNT1, WNT4, WNT5A, WNT7A, WNT11, FZD1-10 and LRP5 expression by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). In addition, RT-PCR for LRP5 expression was performed in 44 OS patient samples and the findings were correlated with clinical data. Expression profiling of Wnts and their receptors revealed the presence of several isoforms in OS cell lines. Overall, 22/44 (50%) of OS patient samples showed evidence of LRP5 expression. Presence of LRP5 correlated significantly with tumor metastasis (p = 0.005) and the chondroblastic subtype of OS (p = 0.045). In addition, patients whose tumors were positive for LRP5 showed a trend toward decreased event-free survival (p = 0.066). No significant association was found between LRP5 expression and age, gender, site of disease, site of metastasis or degree of chemotherapy-induced tumor necrosis. Sequencing of exon 3 of LRP5 in 10 OS patient-derived cell cultures showed no activating mutation of LRP5. These results showed that expression of LRP5 is a common event in OS and strongly suggest a role for LRP and Wnt signaling in the pathobiology and progression of this disease.
Int J
Cancer
2004 Mar
PMID:Expression of LDL receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5) as a novel marker for disease progression in high-grade osteosarcoma. 1473 75
Osteosarcoma
(OS) is a primary
malignancy
of bone with a tendency to metastasize early. Despite intensive chemotherapy and surgical resection, approximately 30% of patients still develop distant metastasis. Our previous work using clinical OS samples suggested that expression of the Wnt receptor LRP5 might be associated with tumor metastasis. In the present study, we used a Dickkopf (Dkk) family member and a dominant-negative LRP5 receptor construct to modulate Wnt signaling in OS cells. Saos-2 cells, which ectopically express Dkk-3, do not undergo apoptosis and exhibit enhanced resistance to serum starvation and chemotherapy-induced cytotoxicity. Transfection of Dkk-3 and dominant-negative LRP5 into Saos-2 cells significantly reduces invasion capacity and cell motility. This blockade is associated with changes in cell morphology consistent with a less invasive phenotype. In addition, Dkk-3 and dominant-negative LRP5 also induce changes in beta-catenin localization consistent with an increase in cell-cell adhesion. Taken together, these results support a possible role for Wnt signaling in the pathobiology and progression of human OS.
Cancer
Res 2004 Apr 15
PMID:Dickkopf 3 inhibits invasion and motility of Saos-2 osteosarcoma cells by modulating the Wnt-beta-catenin pathway. 1508 87
Osteosarcoma
is the most frequent primary
cancer
of bone. When treated by surgery alone, it is almost invariably followed by metastatic dissemination and death. This dismal prognosis can be improved dramatically by including chemotherapy in an interdisciplinary regimen. Today, two-thirds of patients with localised extremity primaries can achieve long-term survival with such intensive multimodal therapy. This article provides a summary overview of current pharmacotherapy in osteosarcoma of the extremities, focussing on the approach of preoperative 'neoadjuvant' chemotherapy and thus, the potential benefits and pitfalls of delaying surgery. Prospective, multi-institutional trials are essential in guaranteeing that as many patients as possible can benefit from modern, efficacious interdisciplinary therapeutic regimens and that further progress can be made.
...
PMID:Delaying surgery with chemotherapy for osteosarcoma of the extremities. 1516 70
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