Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q86TM3 (cage)
29,987 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Blood transfusions are a lifesaving but transient therapy used to correct deficiencies of blood cells and coagulation factors that occur in cancer patients. Anemia can occur in cancer patients as a result of hemolysis, blood loss, or bone marrow failure. The blood component most commonly recommended for the treatment of anemia is packed red blood cells. Coagulation disorders are common with hemangiosarcoma and diffuse hepatic tumors. Fresh frozen plasma is used as a source for replacement coagulation factors for the treatment of disseminated intravascular coagulation or other cancer-associated coagulopathies. Although thrombocytopenia and neutropenia can be the result of bone-marrow failure from tumor infiltration, chemotherapy, or radiation therapy, these platelets and neutrophils are rarely transfused to veterinary cancer patients. Pretransufsion testing consists of blood typing in cats, and cross matching in dogs and cats if the dog has previously been transfused. Cancer patients receiving transfusions should be monitored on a continual basis during and immediately following the transfusion to enable early identification of an adverse event, allowing the transfusion to be discontinued.
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PMID:Transfusion issues in the cancer patient. 1283 Oct 78

Canine hemangiosarcoma is a highly aggressive vascular neoplasm associated with extensive clinical and anatomical heterogeneity and a grave prognosis. Comprehensive molecular characterization of hemangiosarcoma may identify novel therapeutic targets and advanced clinical management strategies, but there are no published reports of tumor-associated genome instability and disrupted gene dosage in this cancer. We performed genome-wide microarray-based somatic DNA copy number profiling of 75 primary intra-abdominal hemangiosarcomas from five popular dog breeds that are highly predisposed to this disease. The cohort exhibited limited global genomic instability, compared to other canine sarcomas studied to date, and DNA copy number aberrations (CNAs) were predominantly of low amplitude. Recurrent imbalances of several key cancer-associated genes were evident; however, the global penetrance of any single CNA was low and no distinct hallmark aberrations were evident. Copy number gains of dog chromosomes 13, 24, and 31, and loss of chromosome 16, were the most recurrent CNAs involving large chromosome regions, but their relative distribution within and between cases suggests they most likely represent passenger aberrations. CNAs involving CDKN2A, VEGFA, and the SKI oncogene were identified as potential driver aberrations of hemangiosarcoma development, highlighting potential targets for therapeutic modulation. CNA profiles were broadly conserved between the five breeds, although subregional variation was evident, including a near twofold lower incidence of VEGFA gain in Golden Retrievers versus other breeds (22 versus 40 %). These observations support prior transcriptional studies suggesting that the clinical heterogeneity of this cancer may reflect the existence of multiple, molecularly distinct subtypes of canine hemangiosarcoma.
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PMID:Genomic profiling reveals extensive heterogeneity in somatic DNA copy number aberrations of canine hemangiosarcoma. 2459 18