Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (ferritin)
17,525 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our recent retrospective analysis of the clinical records of patients who had breast thermography demonstrated that an abnormal thermogram was associated with an increased risk of breast cancer and a poorer prognosis for the breast cancer patient. This study included 100 normal patients, 100 living cancer patients, and 126 deceased cancer patients. Abnormal thermograms included asymmetric focal hot spots, areolar and periareolar heat, diffuse global heat, vessel discrepancy, or thermographic edge sign. Incidence and prognosis were directly related to thermographic results: only 28% of the noncancer patients had an abnormal thermogram, compared to 65% of living cancer patients and 88% of deceased cancer patients. Further studies were undertaken to determine if thermography is an independent prognostic indicator. Comparison to the components of the TNM classification system showed that only clinical size was significantly larger (p = 0.006) in patients with abnormal thermograms. Age, menopausal status, and location of tumor (left or right breast) were not related to thermographic results. Progesterone and estrogen receptor status was determined by both the cytosol-DCC and immunocytochemical methods, and neither receptor status showed any clear relationship to the thermographic results. Prognostic indicators that are known to be related to tumor growth rate were then compared to thermographic results. The concentration of ferritin in the tumor was significantly higher (p = 0.021) in tumors from patients with abnormal thermograms (1512 +/- 2027, n = 50) compared to tumors from patients with normal thermograms (762 +/- 620, n = 21). Both the proportion of cells in DNA synthesis (S-phase) and proliferating (S-phase plus G2M-phase, proliferative index) were significantly higher in patients with abnormal thermograms. The expression of the proliferation-associated tumor antigen Ki-67 was also associated with an abnormal thermogram. The strong relationships of thermographic results with these three growth rate-related prognostic indicators suggest that breast cancer patients with abnormal thermograms have faster-growing tumors that are more likely to have metastasized and to recur with a shorter disease-free interval.
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PMID:Breast thermography is a noninvasive prognostic procedure that predicts tumor growth rate in breast cancer patients. 827 54

Seventy-four neuroblastoma patients were analyzed according to the clinical data including age, stage, bone metastases, primary tumor localization, tumor diameter, LDH, and serum ferritin. Histological examination of tumor specimens comprised calculation of proliferative index (PI) on slides stained with anti Ki-67 antibody and assessment of microvascular density (MVD) on anti-CD34 stained sections. Wide range of PI (1.5-79; median 37.8%) and MVD (41-385; median 172/mm2) values was observed. Significant relationship between higher PI and tumor diameter more than 5 cm (40.3 vs 37.2%) was found. Lower PI was found more frequently in stroma-rich tumors. Significantly higher median MVD was found in infant tumors and in smaller tumors <5 cm. Tendency to inverse relationship between PI and MVD was observed. The high values of both PI and MVD were found in some aggressive tumors in patients >1-year old. We evaluated the new parameter: proliferative-vascular index (PVI) as PVI=PIxMVD which ranged from 213-18333. Among eleven patients >1 year old, with PVI >7000, seven (64%) had a poor outcome within the mean period of 22 months. Our results suggest that the simultaneous estimation of proliferative activity and vascularity of neuroblastomas could be studied as a prognostic indicator. Further investigations are needed to confirm this finding.
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PMID:A correlation of microvascular density and proliferative activity to clinical and histological characteristics in neuroblastoma. 1665 96

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most frequent, complex and heterogeneous lymphoma of adulthood. Heterogeneity is expressed at clinical, genetic, and molecular levels. It is known that BCL-6 expression is a favorable prognostic factor in DLBCL. However, the underlying mechanisms of BCL-6 expression in DLBCL relapse are not yet elucidated. Here, we present so far undescribed clinical phenomenon of switching BCL-6(+) protein expression into BCL-6(-) expression in 19 of 41 relapsed DLBCL patients. The switch in relapsed DLBCL was associated with more aggressive clinical course of the disease. Bone marrow infiltration and high IPI risk were more often present in BCL-6(-) patients. Significantly increased biochemical parameters, such as LDH, beta-2 macroglobulin, CRP, and ferritin have been found, as well as significantly decreased serum Fe, TIBC, and hemoglobin. A Ki-67 proliferation marker was considerably high in relapsed DLBCL, but without significant differences between BCL-6(+) and BCL-6(-) groups of patients. Thus, switching of the positive into negative BCL-6 expression during DLBCL relapse could be used as a prognostic factor and a valuable criterion for treatment decision.
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PMID:Switching to BCL-6 Negativity in Relapsed Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma Correlated with More Aggressive Disease Course. 2543 26