Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 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

Fourteen cases (13 pleural and one intrapulmonary) of solitary fibrous tumors (SFTs) (the so-called fibrous mesothelioma) were studied. The lesions occurred more in females (nine cases) than males (five cases). The age of patients ranged from 44 to 73 years old (median 60 years). The tumors presented as cough with or without blood-tinged sputum, exertional dyspnea, chest pain, nausea, body weight loss, fever, or as asymptomatic masses detected by routine chest radiograph. Two patients with huge (tumor larger than 20 cm) malignant tumors had accompanying pleural effusion and one associated with hypoglycemia. Ten benign tumors measured 2-11 cm (median size 7 cm) while the remaining four histologically malignant ones measured 20-30 cm in size. All of them were well circumscribed and thinly encapsulated. Hemorrhage and necrosis were more frequently seen in the malignant tumors. Histologically, these lesions were characterized by 'patternless pattern' with occasional hemangiopericytic features (three cases). The tumor cells were all immunoreactive for vimentin, CD 34, and focally actin-positive in one case, but not for keratin, desmin, S-100 protein, carcinoembryonic antigen, alpha 1-ACT and F VIII-related antigen, supported a primitive mesenchymal origin. p53 protein was expressed in two of the malignant cases. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen stain was positive with 50 and 80% of the labeling index in the benign and malignant tumors, respectively, but retinoblastoma gene protein was negative in all tumors. This analysis confirmed the relationship between histological malignant SFTs and tumor size, cellularity, mitotic activity, necrosis and tumor suppressor gene expression. However, the clinical behavior was unpredictable. Complete respectability seemed to be the most important indicator of clinical outcome in the less aggressive tumors.
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PMID:Thoracic solitary fibrous tumor: clinical and pathological diversity. 1010 Jan 46

We review cases of thymic cell tumor treated between January 1991 and March 1998. Nineteen of the 23 cases studied involved thymoma. Eight (42%) were asymptomatic, 4 (21%) were associated with myasthenia gravis and 7 (37%) were symptomatic. The most common symptom was non-specific chest pain, reported by 4 (47%) patients with symptoms. Classifying the cases of thymoma by Masaoka's system, we found that 12 were cases of thymoma in stage I (63.2%), 4 in stage II (21.1%) and 3 in stage III (15.8%). No stage IV patients were treated. Treatment consisted of full exeresis of the tumor in 17 (89.5%) cases, partial resection in one case (5.2%) and biopsy of the tumor in one non-resectable, case. Adjuvant radiotherapy was applied in seven cases. Chemotherapy was not prescribed. With follow-up ranging from 9 to 96 months, half the patients survived 21 months after surgery. Among the surviving patients, mortality was nil at the end of the study. The results of microscopic, cytologic and blood analyses were of scarce value in differentiating between benign and malignant tumors, even though p53 and bcl2 antigen positivity and clinical stage have been related to poor prognosis in recent years.
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PMID:[Thymoma. A retrospective study]. 1043 29

The occurrence of primary lung cancer is rare in childhood. The case of an 11-year-old boy with primary lung cancer is presented in this report. He had a substantial family history of cancer. His chief complaint was coughing with right chest pain. A chest radiograph showed a coin lesion in the right lower lung. A right lower lobectomy revealed a squamous cell carcinoma (stage IIIA at Japanese TNM classification). Systemic chemotherapy using cisplatin, vindesine, THP-adriamycin and cyclophosphamide was performed. Six months after surgery, a recurrent tumor occurred. An analysis of the familial cancer related genes (p53 gene and mismatch repair gene) showed no abnormality.
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PMID:Lung cancer in a child with a substantial family history of cancer. 1066 54

We reviewed 11 cases of primary thymic neuroendocrine carcinomas with combined features ranging from well-differentiated to poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma. For 3 asymptomatic patients, tumors were discovered during routine examination. Presentation in the other patients was as follows: Cushing syndrome, 2 patients; chest pain, 3 patients; superior vena cava syndrome, 1 patient; and hypercalcemia and hypophosphatemia, 1 patient. No clinical data were available for the 11th patient. All tumors were located in the anterior mediastinum and treated by surgical excision. The lesions were large and well-circumscribed with areas of hemorrhage and necrosis. They were characterized by areas showing a proliferation of monotonous, round tumor cells adopting a prominent organoid pattern admixed with areas showing sheets of atypical cells with hyperchromatic nuclei, frequent mitoses, and extensive areas of hemorrhage and necrosis. Immunohistochemical studies performed in 6 cases showed strong CAM 5.2 low-molecular-weight cytokeratin positivity in all cases, chromogranin and synaptophysin positivity in 4, Leu-7 in 3, and focal positivity for p53 in 2. Follow-up information for 9 cases showed that all patients died of their tumors between 1 and 4 years after diagnosis. The present cases highlight the heterogeneity of neuroendocrine neoplasms and reinforce the notion that these tumors form part of a continuous spectrum of differentiation.
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PMID:Thymic neuroendocrine carcinomas with combined features ranging from well-differentiated (carcinoid) to small cell carcinoma. A clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 11 cases. 1070 13

Twenty-two cases of oncocytic thymic neuroendocrine carcinomas (carcinoid tumors) are presented. The patients were 17 men and 5 women between the ages of 26 and 84 years (median, 55 years). Nine were asymptomatic, and the tumor was found on routine examination; four patients presented with chest pain, two with weight loss, two with multiple endocrine neoplasia I syndrome, and one with Cushing's syndrome. Surgical resection of the mediastinal tumor was performed in all cases. The lesions were described as soft, light tan to brown, measuring from 3 to 20 cm in greatest diameter. On cut section, the tumors showed a homogeneous surface, soft consistency, and focal areas of hemorrhage. Microscopically, the lesions were characterized by nests or trabeculae of tumor cells that contained abundant granular to densely eosinophilic cytoplasm, with round to oval nuclei and in some areas prominent nucleoli. Mitotic figures ranged from 2 to 10 per 10 high-power fields; foci of comedonecrosis were seen in all cases. Immunohistochemical studies including broad spectrum keratin, CAM 5.2, chromogranin, synaptophysin, Leu-7, and p53 were performed in 12 cases. All of the tumors were strongly positive for CAM 5.2 low-molecular-weight cytokeratin, 11 showed strong positive reaction for Leu-7, 10 for broad-spectrum keratin, 8 for chromogranin, 7 for synaptophysin, and only 1 case showed focal positive staining of the tumor cells for p53. Clinical follow-up of 14 patients showed that 10 were alive between 2 and 11 years, and 4 patients had died of tumor from 4 to 11 years after diagnosis. Patients with good clinical outcome were those whose tumors showed low mitotic activity and minimal nuclear pleomorphism, whereas those who had died of their tumors were those whose tumors were characterized by marked nuclear atypia and higher mitotic rates. Oncocytic thymic carcinoids should be added to the differential diagnosis of anterior mediastinal neoplasms characterized by a monotonous population of tumor cells with prominent oncocytic features.
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PMID:Primary neuroendocrine carcinoma (thymic carcinoid) of the thymus with prominent oncocytic features: a clinicopathologic study of 22 cases. 1082 19

Ganglioneuromas (GNs) are neural crest cell-derived tumors and rarely occur in the adrenal gland. There are presently no markers that can reliably distinguish benign and malignant neuroendocrine tumors. Here we describe a 63-year-old woman who developed sudden chest pain and hypertension combined with increased stool frequency. An incidental adrenal mass 5 cm in size with a bright signal on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging was discovered. Biochemical evaluation and (131)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy were negative. Histopathological examination revealed a mature adrenal GN. Neuroblastoma, the immature form of a GN, is known for deletions on chromosomal locus 1p36, and adrenal tumors frequently show allele loss on 17p. To further elucidate the histo- and pathogenesis of adrenal GN, we performed loss of heterozygosity studies on chromosomal loci 1p34-36 and 17p13 (the p53 gene locus) after careful microdissection of tumor and normal tissue. We did not detect allelic losses at these loci with the informative polymorphic markers used, suggesting that these loci are not involved in tumorigenesis. In addition, immunohistochemical investigation of the GN was positive for vasoactive intestinal peptide, a hormone commonly expressed in ganglion cells. We suggest that in our patient with an adrenal GN, the combination of biochemical, scintigraphic, molecular, immunohistochemical, and histopathological findings are all consistent with the benign morphology of this tumor.
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PMID:Adrenal ganglioneuroma in a patient presenting with severe hypertension and diarrhea. 1265 73

Carcinosarcoma of the esophagus is a rare tumor with a distinct pathological entity having squamous cell carcinoma as the most described carcinomatous component. This paper reports the first case of carcinosarcoma of the esophagus that showed predominant basaloid squamous carcinoma component in addition to squamous cell carcinoma and poorly differentiated carcinoma and sarcoma component. A 64-year-old male patient consulted for dysphasia and chest pain was examined and found to have gastrointestinal fiber-endoscope and a polypoid growth in the lower third of the esophagus. Partial esophagectomy was performed and the excised tumor showed histological features of carcinosarcoma with heterogeneous carcinomatous components with dominance of basaloid squamous carcinoma and minority of squamous cell carcinoma, poorly differentiated carcinoma, and sarcomatous component, immunohistochemically proven to be rhabdomyosarcoma. Immunohistochemical study and TP53 mutation analysis was carried out to explain the histogenesis of this rare tumor. The distinct immunohistochemical profiles of the carcinomatous and sarcomatous components suggested the possibility of transition from a carcinomatous to a sarcomatous component. The similar TP53 mutation in the carcinomatous and sarcomatous component suggested each of these components had the same origin, that is, the tumor was monoclonal in origin.
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PMID:Esophageal carcinosarcoma with basaloid squamous carcinoma and rhabdomyosarcoma components with TP53 mutation. 1548 72

Malignant mesothelioma is an aggressive, treatment-resistant tumour, which is increasing in frequency throughout the world. Although the main risk factor is asbestos exposure, a virus, simian virus 40 (SV40), could have a role. Mesothelioma has an unusual molecular pathology with loss of tumour suppressor genes being the predominant pattern of lesions, especially the P16INK4A, and P14ARF, and NF2 genes, rather than the more common p53 and Rb tumour suppressor genes. Cytopathology of mesothelioma effusions or fine-needle aspirations are often sufficient to establish a diagnosis, but histopathology is also often required. Patients typically present with breathlessness and chest pain with pleural effusions. Median survival is now 12 months from diagnosis. Palliative chemotherapy is beneficial for mesothelioma patients with high performance status. The role of aggressive surgery remains controversial and growth factor receptor blockade is still unproven. Gene therapy and immunotherapy are used on an experimental basis only. Patterns identified from microarray studies could be useful for diagnosis as well as prognostication.
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PMID:Malignant mesothelioma. 1605 41

This study was performed to add clinical data, to introduce new markers, and to perform syntactic structural analysis on localized fibrous tumors (LFTs) of the pleura. The material comprised clinical data and processed sections obtained from 36 patients. The results achieved from quantitative imaging techniques and syntactic structure analysis were correlated with clinical data, including patients' habits (smoking), asbestos exposure, survival, and tumor recurrence. The disease caused increasing chest pain and dyspnea in 47% of patients. Exposure to asbestos was noted in 13 out of 36 patients, whereas smoking posed no major risk factor. Two patients developed a recurrent tumor after 8 and 42 months, respectively; none of the other patients died of this tumor disease within the follow-up period of maximal 212 months. The cases were clearly discriminated from mesotheliomas by the marker profile. Frequent expression of accessible ligands for endogenous lectins galectins-1 and -3, the expression of the angiogenic macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), and the dense vascularization intimate a functional relationship. The proliferation index (Nv) was computed to be 1.6% in line with the balance of galectin expression. Abnormal p53 was expressed in only 19.4% of the cases. The diagnosis of LFT can be aided by quantitative assessment of vimentin, CD34, MIF, vascularization, and proliferation. Considering the galectin network, differential expression was noted with preference to effectors limiting growth and aggressiveness.
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PMID:Localized fibrous tumors (LFTs) of the pleura: clinical data, asbestos burden, and syntactic structure analysis applied to newly defined angiogenic/growth-regulatory effectors. 1630 4


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