Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (erbB-2)
5,251 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to construct a multivariate model for predicting early recurrence and cancer death for patients with stage I non-small cell lung cancer, 271 consecutive patients (mean age, 63 +/- 8 years) who were diagnosed, treated, and followed at one institution were studied. All patients were clinical stage I with head and chest/abdominal computed tomograms and radionuclide bone scans without evidence of metastatic disease. Pathological material after resection was reviewed to verify histological staging. Follow-up documented the time and location of any recurrence, was a median 56 months in duration, and was complete in all cases. Data recorded included age, sex, smoking history, presenting symptoms, pathological description, and oncoprotein staining for erbB-2 (HER-2/neu), p53, and KI-67 proliferation protein. Immunohistochemistry of oncogene expression was performed on two separate archived paraffin tumor blocks for each patient, with normal lung as control. All analyses were blinded and included Kaplan-Meier survival estimates with Cox proportional hazards regression modeling. Data, including immunohistochemistry, were complete for all 271 patients. Actual 5-year survival was 63% and actuarial 10-year survival was 58%. Significant univariate predictors (P < 0.05) of early recurrence and cancer-death were: male sex; the presence of symptoms; chest pain; type of cough; hemoptysis; tumor size > 3 cm diameter (T2); poor differentiation; vascular invasion; erbB-2 expression; p53 expression; and a higher KI-67 proliferation index (> 5%). An additive oncogene expression curve demonstrated a 5-year survival of 72% for 136 patients without p53 or erbB-2, 58% for 108 patients who expressed either oncogene, and 38% for 27 who expressed both (P < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:A prognostic model of recurrence and death in stage I non-small cell lung cancer utilizing presentation, histopathology, and oncoprotein expression. 780 40

Although recent advances in therapy have improved the quality of life in patients with extensive stage small cell lung cancer (ESSCLC), prolonged survival is still uncommon. To determine the role of HER-2/neu overexpression and other clinical predictors (symptoms at presentation) of adverse outcome in ESSCLC, we performed a retrospective study on subjects with a biopsy-proven diagnosis of ESSCLC. HER-2/neu overexpression was evaluated using immunohistochemistry (IHC) performed on paraffin-embedded specimens. An IHC score of > or = 2+ was considered positive for overexpression. Between 1991 and 2000, 223 patients with ESSCLC were identified, of whom 193 patients (84 females, 109 males) with a mean age of 68.5 years (range: 42-90 years) had adequate tissue specimens for HER-2/neu testing. The symptoms at initial presentation and proportionate number of patients were: weight loss 61 (31.6%), cough 53 (27.5%), dyspnea 33 (17.1%), mass on chest radiograph 18 (9.3%), chest pain 15 (7.7%), asymptomatic 14 (7.2%) and others (weakness, lymphadenopathy, hoarseness and paraneoplastic syndromes) 29 (15.0%). Of the 193 specimens, 57 (29.5%) revealed HER-2/neu overexpression. The median survival for patients with ESSCLC who were HER-2/neu positive was 8 months (range: 1-25.5 months) while that in the HER-2/neu negative group was 16 months (range: 2-34 months). Interestingly, after adjusting for age, performance status and type of therapy, subset analysis revealed that the survival was significantly lower in HER-2/neu positive individuals (P<0.001; Mann-Whitney U-test). In our study, weight loss and cough were the two most common (59%) presenting complaints in patients with ESSCLC. Also, since HER-2/neu positivity was a marker for poor prognosis in ESSCLC, testing for overexpression may play a role in identifying patients at risk for shortened survival. Further studies would delineate whether HER-2/neu overexpression renders SCLC chemoresistant and thus, adversely affects outcome. There exists a need for randomized controlled trials to assess the role of Herceptin (alone or in combination with standard chemotherapy) in patients with ESSCLC.
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PMID:Predictive role of HER-2/neu overexpression and clinical features at initial presentation in patients with extensive stage small cell lung carcinoma. 1200 35