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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among the various factors reported as having significant prognostic value in primary breast cancers, the author discusses the value of well established "classical" prognostic factors used routinely and "new" prognostic factors developed over recent years as a result of progress in cell and molecular biology. The presence of axillary lymph node metastases remains the most important prognostic factor of recurrence, justifying post-surgical adjuvant therapy. However, in patients with negative axillary nodes (N-), the size of the tumour, Scarff-Bloom-Richardson (SBR and MSBR) histological grade, certain particular histological types (carcinoma in situ and tubular, colloid or pure papillary cancer) and hormone receptors (ER and PR) appear to be well established prognostic factors allowing the identification, within this group of N- patients who generally have a good prognosis, those patients with a low risk of recurrence and therefore not requiring adjuvant therapy. In contrast, the proliferative activity (ploidy and S phase, Thymidine Labeling Index, antibody Ki67),
cathepsin D
, thymidine kinase, EGF receptors, several genes including oncogene
HER-2/neu
, are recently developed prognostic factors whose significance needs to be confirmed by further studies.
...
PMID:[Prognostic factors in breast cancer]. 134 Jan 64
We conducted a trial in 42 benign and malignant meningiomas to assess a possible influence of preoperative dexamethasone therapy on mitotic index, labelling indices of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), progesterone receptor, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R), c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein,
cathepsin D
, gamma-gamma enolase as well as the mean number of silver-stained nucleolar organizer region-associated proteins (AgNORs). Tumors with preceding dexamethasone therapy for more than 1 day display significantly less immunohistochemical staining for PCNA. A correlation between the labelling index of PCNA and the degree of malignancy could not be identified. There was no significant effect of preoperative dexamethasone therapy on the other parameters. Our data suggest that dexamethasone may selectively inhibit the expression of PCNA in the G1/S-phase of the cell cycle. Thus, we emphasize the necessity to heed factors, e.g. dexamethasone, which may affect the expression of proliferating markers.
...
PMID:Influence of preoperative dexamethasone therapy on proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) expression in comparison to other parameters in meningiomas. 136 Aug 48
Forty patients with intermediate stage (T2 > 3 cm-T3, N0-N1) operable breast cancer received neoadjuvant chemotherapy by MCF (mitoxantrone, cyclophosphamide, 5-fluorouracil). Four cycles were administered at 3-week intervals. The obvious hematological toxicity (64% of grade III for the leucocytes and up to 34% of grade IV for the granulocytes) was rapidly reversible and did not hinder completion of the treatment. Ten patients showed a complete remission and a tumor volume regression of more than 50% was observed in 12 other patients. Tumor shrinkage allowed breast-saving surgery in 50% of the cases. A complete sterilisation of the surgical specimen was found in only two of the 40 patients and a few persisting neoplastic cells were found in ten other cases. A positive response at the level of the axillary lymph nodes was also obtained in more than 50% of the cases. In 25 of the 36 cases examined, the primary chemotherapy induced cellular lesions (fibrosis, necrosis) at the tumor level. A feasibility study was undertaken in order to determine quantitatively several biochemical parameters (steroid hormone receptors,
cathepsin D
, c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein) in very small tumor samples obtained by Tru-Cut before any treatment and in surgical specimens. In the future, these micromethods will be used systematically with the aim of estimating the value of these potential prognostic factors for therapeutic follow-up of the patients.
...
PMID:[Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, with mitoxantrone, cyclophosphamide and fluorouracil, in operable breast cancer of intermediate stage: first results of a phase II study in 40 patients]. 148 24
With the increasing availability of screening mammography, more women are diagnosed as having breast cancers at an early, node-negative stage. The majority of these patients would be cured with total mastectomy or breast conservation treatment. However, about 30% of the patients would have recurrence of disease in distant sites. In recent randomized clinical trials, adjuvant systemic therapy has been shown to reduce the rate of recurrence in these patients. Proper selection of patients for adjuvant therapy is necessary to avoid exposing many patients with low risk of recurrence to treatments for whom the benefit is not justified by the toxicity and the cost. In this article, we review the clinical and pathologic prognostic factors in early stage, node-negative breast cancer patients, including tumor size, nuclear and histologic grades, estrogen and progesterone receptors, menopausal status, proliferative rate,
HER-2/neu
oncogene amplification, and
cathepsin D
level. Favorable prognostic factors include tumor size less than or equal to 2 cm, low nuclear and histologic grades, low S-phase fraction, diploid state, low cathepsin-D level, and positive estrogen and progesterone receptor status. The value of
HER-2/neu
oncogene overexpression is controversial, and further studies are needed to define its role as a prognostic factor in patients with node-negative breast cancer. Based on these prognostic factors, it is possible to identify subsets of patients who have a low risk of recurrence and would not benefit significantly from adjuvant systemic therapy.
...
PMID:Prognostic indicators in node-negative early stage breast cancer. 158 Mar
Variability in outcome of breast carcinoma among different racial groups has been identified between Japanese and Caucasians and between Caucasians and Blacks living in the United States. These differences are not fully explained by population differences of the known prognostic variables nodal involvement and tumor hormonal receptor status. Further elucidation of the differences in outcome should include a careful examination of other prognostic variables. These include tumor size, nuclear and histologic grade, and indicators of cell proliferation (labelling index and flow cytometric measures of S phase and DNA ploidy). More recent studies indicate that growth factor regulation, oncogene amplification (
HER-2/neu
) and expression, and
cathepsin D
levels may help to further identify prognostic subgroups. A review of the literature does not provide an answer to the question of whether there are population differences in response to standard treatments. Differences in drug distribution, elimination, and metabolism which could be related to genetic or dietary factors are intriguing hypotheses to explain why differences may exist. Careful, well controlled studies to answer these questions are urgently needed.
...
PMID:Response to treatment of breast cancer. 165 92
Features of 111 mammary carcinomas derived from breast cancer screening were compared with those of 69 carcinomas presenting 'clinically'. Screen detected cancers were smaller, had less likelihood of nodal metastases, included a higher proportion of in situ tumours and if invasive, tended to be of lower grade. Using immunohistochemical methods, the expression of c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and
cathepsin D
were compared in the two groups. A similar proportion of screened and unscreened tumours expressed c-
erbB-2
oncoprotein and EGFR but expression of the oestrogen regulated protein
cathepsin D
was significantly more frequent in the screened group (P less than 0.05). Although a relatively small series, the results suggest a biological difference between 'screened' and 'clinical' tumours.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical and other features of breast carcinomas presenting clinically compared with those detected by cancer screening. 168 Mar 69
We have earlier described a monoclonal antibody (323/A3) against a Mr 43,000 surface glycoprotein of MCF-7 human breast cancer cells which shows considerable specificity for primary and metastatic breast tumors (Cancer Res., 46: 1306-1317, 1986). Here we report the occurrence of the 323/A3 antigen in a large cohort of primary breast tumors (m = 384) and its interrelationship with several clinically important variables. Frozen, stored tumor tissues were examined by a Western blot procedure, and the level of 323/A3 protein in individual tumors was calculated in arbitrary units based on the integrated Mr 43,000 signal in tumors compared with an MCF-7 internal standard. Thirty-six % (139 of 384) of tumors were found to be positive for 323/A3. Higher frequencies of 323/A3 protein were found in tumors larger than 2 cm (P = 0.03), tumors with infiltrated lymph nodes (P = 0.01), and tumors without estrogen receptor (P = 0.006). No significant relationship was found with patient age, menopausal status, or progesterone receptor status. Of the newer clinical determinants proliferative rate (% S phase), DNA ploidy, and the lysosomal protease
cathepsin D
, but not the
HER-2/neu
oncogene protein, were significantly correlated with 323/A3. The presence of 323/A3 protein was also related to increased recurrence (P = 0.003) and mortality (P = 0.036) after primary treatment. As an exposed surface antigen, this glycoprotein might be a useful target in radioimaging and immunotherapy of some human breast tumors, especially those having large size, infiltrated lymph nodes, deficient estrogen receptor, high proliferative rate, abnormal DNA content, and high levels of
cathepsin D
, all of which are ominous indicators of tumor behavior.
...
PMID:Association of the 323/A3 surface glycoprotein with tumor characteristics and behavior in human breast cancer. 233 24
Mutation and overexpression of p53 occurs in 20-40% of breast cancers and has been shown to be an independent prognostic indicator. Recently we have demonstrated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) expression in breast tumours to be suggestive of favourable prognosis, but quantitative relationships between PSA and p53, and between these and other prognostic factors in breast cancer, have not been investigated. Time-resolved immunofluorometric procedures were used to quantify both p53 protein and PSA in 200 breast tumour extracts, which were also assayed for oestrogen (ER) and progesterone receptors (PGR), epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR),
cathepsin D
and
HER-2/neu
, and characterised for S-phase fraction and DNA ploidy. Weak Spearman correlations were found between p53 and ER (r = - 0.18, P = 0.010), PGR (r = - 0.15, P = 0.0385) and S-phase fraction (r = 0.17, P = 0.016), while PSA was correlated only with PGR (r = 0.16, P = 0.025). Wilcoxon rank sum analysis revealed that levels of ER (P = 0.0001), PGR (P = 0.0001), S-phase fraction (P = 0.0001) and EGFR (P = 0.0014) differed significantly between the two groups categorised as p53 negative or p53 positive. Tumours classified as PSA negative or PSA positive were found to differ with respect to PGR (P = 0.0091) and S-phase fraction (P = 0.011) in a similar analysis. Contingency tables indicated significant negative associations between the status of p53 and that of ER (P = 0.003) and PGR (P = 0.001) and between PSA and S-phase fraction (P = 0.012), and positive associations between p53 and EGFR (P = 0.017),
HER-2/neu
(P = 0.008), S-phase fraction (P = 0.001) and aneuploidy (P = 0.007), and between PSA and both ER (P = 0.061) and PGR (P = 0.010). No significant associations were found between p53 and PSA. Our results demonstrate that the presence of p53 in breast tumours relates to several other variables which are suspected to predict aggressive tumour phenotypes and that the presence of PSA relates to variables associated with good prognosis.
...
PMID:Immunofluorometric analysis of p53 protein and prostate-specific antigen in breast tumours and their association with other prognostic indicators. 754 16
We evaluated the intra- and inter-observer reproducibility of quantitative immunohistochemical (IHC) analyses using the Cell Analysis Systems (CAS) 200/486 image analyzer of Estrogen Receptor (ER), Progesterone Receptor (PR), proliferation-associated nuclear protein (Ki67),
HER-2/neu
(c-
erbB-2
) protein over-expression and
cathepsin D
(CD) in 20 randomly-selected invasive breast carcinomas. Qualitative analysis of IHC Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGF-R) was also assessed in this study for comparative purposes. Duplicate blind assessments by the same observer showed excellent correlations for all quantitative IHC features (P < 0.001; P = 0.004 for neu). However, the immuno-quantitative analyses results between the 3 different operators showed lower correlation coefficient values, thus being less reproducible. This resulted in systematic differences and bias between the observers. This was also clear from the overall agreement between the 3 observers which was 70% for ER, 70% for PR, 56% for Ki67, 79% for c-
erbB-2
and 75% for CD. The qualitative visual assessments of EGF-R, expressed as either positive or negative, showed a 75% agreement between observers and 85% intra-observer agreement (comparable to quantitative digital image processing results). The same results were obtained with kappa statistics. A further analysis of the factors causing the lack of reproducibility was performed. For quantitative IHC, segmentation of stored and retrieved digitized images was quite reproducible between and within well-trained observers. However, variation between different fields of vision of one and the same section showed large variations for most cases. Therefore, differences in sampling of fields within a section appeared to be the major cause of lack of reproducibility between observers, although segmentation differences still added slightly to the inter-observer variations. Accordingly, a strict sampling protocol of fields of vision is mandatory to obtain reproducible quantitative IHC results. It is clear from the present study that so-called random (but in fact, at convenience) selection of fields of vision for measurement is not a sufficient guarantee of adequacy of the sampling.
...
PMID:Quantitative immunohistochemistry using the CAS 200/486 image analysis system in invasive breast carcinoma: a reproducibility study. 754 96
The purpose of this study was to characterize the clinical and histological features of intraoral squamous cell carcinoma in men who were seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus and to evaluate viral cofactors (human papillomavirus, herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus), proliferative index (proliferating cell nuclear antigen), a factor associated with invasion (
cathepsin D
), and mutated tumor suppressor gene and proto-oncogene products (mutated p53, c-
erbB-2
). Four men who were seropositive for the human immunodeficiency virus and had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome presented with painful oral lesions of variable duration. Oral cancer risk factors included heavy tobacco use (four of four), heavy alcohol use (three of four), and previous radiotherapy (one of four). The lesions consisted of ulcers (two of four), a fungating mass (one of four), and papillary erythroplakia (one of four). Incisional biopsy specimens were obtained. High-stringency in situ hybridization was performed with DNA probes to the human papillomavirus (types 6/11; 16/18; 31/33/35) and Epstein-Barr virus: Immunocytochemical studies for the herpes simplex virus, proliferating cell nuclear antigen,
cathepsin D
, mutated p53, and c-
erbB-2
were performed. Two lesions were moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, one lesion was a basaloid squamous cell carcinoma, and one was carcinoma in situ. Stage of disease at diagnosis was II (one of four), III (two of four), and IV (one of four). Three cases were positive for the human papillomavirus, one case was positive for Epstein-Barr virus, and three cases were positive for the herpes simplex virus.
C-erbB-2
was focally positive in one case, and mutated p53 was positive in a separate case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intraoral squamous cell carcinoma in human immunodeficiency virus infection. A clinicopathologic study. 755 63
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